African American writers

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    Zora Neal Hurston was an African American novelist, and anthropologist. She mainly focused her work on the black culture and exploring her own self-identity and also helping others to do so. Surprisingly of an African American woman, she was against all of the “racial equality” and desegregation laws, because she did not believe in identifying herself with the black race (in which they explain why in further detail in the article I chose). The title of the article I chose is Zora says, Racs,…

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    the most influential African American female writers in feminism was Zora Neale Hurston. During the Harlem Renaissance, she was well known because of her unique writing style and the topics she chose to write about. Hurston’s short story called “Sweat” informed readers on feminism and shows a different perspective on African American life which was significant to her and impacts other uninformed audiences. Hurston’s works on feminism and her unique perspective on African American culture still…

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    original, and insightful writers and artists for African Americans in the United States. These writers and artists helped influence African Americans achieve acceptance and continue the progress to help them become accepted into society. During the 1880s, the legalization of segregation laws created inequality for African Americans; however, in the early 1900s, both Aaron Douglas, an artist, and W.E.B Du Bois, a public speaker, advocated for change for African Americans. It would not be until…

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    Renaissance were Claude McKay and Zora Neale Hurston. The main difference between the two is the genre they wrote; while they both focused on African American images and issues in relation to their own experiences, McKay was a poet whereas Hurston preferred to write folklore stories. Claude McKay focused on the duality of the feelings of African Americans, whereas Zora Neale Hurston focused more on societal pressures and how this impacted blacks Claude McKay was born and raised in Jamaica but…

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    The article states that african americans and other minorities are being discriminated against and victimized to unnecessary violence. The writer portrayed the situation with fear using facts of what happened in charlottesville, warning us of the beginning of white nationalism. The group stuck in this turmoil is african americans and other minorities while the message is for president trump. The similarities between both articles is being discrimination in groups, this case being the…

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    Langston Hughes Poem

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    “Poems,” Fiction,” and “Drama” Langston Hughes is the poet laureate of African-American experience. He is a popular writer of the Harlem Renaissance, and the one to give hopeful expression to the aspirations of the oppressed, even as he decried racism and injustice. In addition to poetry, he published fiction, drama, which also explained the challenges of the African-Americans. He also explained how the dreams of the black Americans were shattered using different tones, symbols, and themes in…

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    basis of their race. More than two million people of the African- American community are below the poverty level. This also happens to be the most victimised group in America. The civil war was meant to change the lives of many African-Americans, it did, marginally. An unofficial finding states that between 1836 and 1879, two African- Americans were lynched in the…

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    the first, Nobel Prize winning, female, African-American writers? Maya Angelou astounded everyone with her amazing poems and stories. Without any writing experience, whatsoever, she became one of the best-known authors of her time. Her first story, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, a story about her struggles through childhood was a best seller. Despite a tough childhood, Maya Angelou persevered, and became one of the most inspiring and influential writers of her time, receiving many awards…

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    a movement of social and artistic advancement that defined an era for African-Americans, not only in the United States, but around the world. The movement also laid the foundations for an entirely different future for African-Americans living in the United States. However, this racial progress would not have been possible without the imaginative genius that grew from writers, poets, and playwrights within the African-American communities. Among these historic figures was the “O. Henry of Harlem”…

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    time in American history African-American writers gathered in the same place at the same time, such writers as Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Paul Lawrence Dunbar and insular Hurston and many more. These writers created an environment and network that had never been seen before they were able to create poetry clubs throughout Harlem given the opportunity for young writers to display their skills and they would not network with each other not meeting weekly at different homes of the writers to…

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