African American Culture Essay

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    1903, African Americans were fighting for the right to vote, the right to good education, and the right to be treated with equality. W.E.B DuBois wrote “The Souls of Black Folk” to demonstrate the life and time of African Americans in one of the most unequal time periods. He says that the biggest problem is the existing “color-line” that has been drawn between the white and black, setting up the society for inequality issues. He goes on to continue addressing the progress the African Americans…

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    than that. Social, political, and historical events helped shaped the culture of the 1960s and 1960s art. The 60’s is a decade that still has an impact on the world today. There were many big historical events that took place in this decade, one of them being a national known tragedy, the Kennedy assassination in 1963. No one really…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural movement in the 1920s focusing on African-American literature, music, and art. Langston Hughes was an American author, poet and playwright and is known as one of the main literary contributors to the Harlem Renaissance. His main focus in writing was African American culture and he was among the first writers to “use jazz music and dialect to depict the life of urban blacks in his work” (A&E Network). Langston Hughes was born as James Mercer Langston Hughes…

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    Racial Socialization

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    Identity African American parents and grandparents play a pivotal role in the socialization of children as they help children to understand norms, roles, status, and expectations of the larger society (Mutisya & Ross, 2005). They teach, set moral standards, discipline, and provide cultural continuity in a community (McGinn, 2001). In this way, African American parents and grandparents provide a foundation to help African American children cope with and adjust to the racism and discrimination…

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    Race and culture are terms that are often used interchangeably, however there are distinct differences between these words. Often, one’s culture is assumed based off their race, yet culture is not always a direct result of race. Race is constant and cannot be changed, and comes with birth. Culture on the other hand, is adopted, and is the result of one’s surroundings, friends, home, and beliefs. While it is true that races are often associated with a certain culture, being of a certain race is…

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    During the period of 1917-1935 existed an artistic, social and cultural phenomenon swept throughout the entire United States. A explosion of creativity resulting from African American influence brought new styles and freedom in the arts. Historians dubbed the period as the Harlem Renaissance, seeing the upheaval of African American culture and civil rights and the introduction of new artistic styles such as Jazz and Negro Literature. Therefore, which poet represents the ideology of the Harlem…

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    Black-on-Black crime is one, if not the worst, challenge African Americans face today because it claims the lives of so many people, whether it be through death of a victim or a life spent in prison for committing crimes. Black-on-black crime and violence are major problems in current society because these tragic crimes and brutal violence break down African American unity. An astonishing amount of crime committed against African Americans is black-on-black crime. The vast majority of these…

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    Black Africans/African Americans and Native Americans contact situation with colonists can be described by all three characteristics, only that Native Americans did not become slaves as black Africans did. Based on ethnocentric characteristic, black Africans and Native Americans were seen completely different human beings from the colonists, because of the language, the appearance, and the lifestyle. The…

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    Object Relation Theory

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    Donna is an African American who lives in Washington DC. Per study done by Cain and Combs-Orme (2005), 67% of African-American mothers reported agreement with very strict, rigid, and authoritarian discipline practices such as hitting, intimidation, pain and belittlement. The way Donna was parented by most of her family members fits the model of the prevailing parenting style of African American families. Donna did not disclose at the initial assessment if she experienced acts of racial…

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    recall the Harlem Renaissance as an exceptional progression, certainly, African Americans amidst the 1920s in like way made personality boggling walks around melodic and visual verbalizations, and moreover science. Point of fact, the enabling improvements in African American social nearness of the 1920s were not constrained to Harlem, but rather in like way had developed in other urban get-togethers where diminish Americans moved in sublime numbers. Never overwhelmed by a specific school of…

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