Gilbert du Motier

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    Frederick Douglass, Booker T. Washington, and W.E.B. Du Bois’s views about African-American freedom are different. Frederick Douglass was born into slavery. Many years after constant abuse Douglass fought back to the “slaver-breaker” Mr. Convey. After losing a physical confrontation with Douglass, Mr. Convey never lash at him again. Douglass attempted to escape slavery twice before he succeeded. In Frederick Douglass’s autobiography, Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave…

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    The Black Renaissance or New Negro Movement spoke to a social development among African Americans, generally between the finish of World War I in 1918 and the start of the Great Depression in1929. This Harlem Renaissance focused on African Americans, and the artistic spirit reawakened in African American social life. Historians recall the movement as a scholarly development and literary movement. African Americans amid the 1920s additionally made awesome walks in melodic and visual…

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    Life is Fine is a narrative poem by Langston Hughes. It discusses the author’s reasons to live despite his struggles in life. In the time the poem was written, many people, especially black people, wanted to commit suicide. This poem was written during the Harlem Renaissance, a time where African American writing flourished in the United States starting in the 1920’s. In the poem, he notably uses poetic devices such as refrain and repetition. Refrain is found in the poem after every 2 stanzas.…

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    Nick Bauer Mrs. Gerdes English 3 29 March 2017 Langston Hughes Langston Hughes was one of the greatest African American advocates of all time. He contributed more to the Harlem Renaissance than imaginable. He changed the world through poetry. He brought empowerment to people, but especially black women and men. His goal wasn’t to save the world on his own but spark the mind of others that could save the world, through his poetry. He was truly a one of a kind man that had one of the biggest…

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    Douglass and Du Bois were apart of organizations that fought for the rights of “black” people. Douglass worked with the abolitionists and the anti-slavery society while Du Bois worked with the NAACP and the Niagara movement. Part of why Du Bois criticises Washington is because he claims that Washington is asking “black” people to give up three things which include, “First, political power, Second, insistence on civil rights, Third, higher education of the negro youth” (DuBois 29). Du Bois argues…

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    The innovation of the Harlem Renaissance may be appointed by cultural shift due to the work of various authors, musicians, and artists during the 1920s. Seeking a better lifestyle “By the 1920s, the black population in Manhattan had settled into the northern part of the island known as Harlem, and included native New Yorkers, southern newcomers, and Anglophone immigrants from the Caribbean” (“Teaching the American 20s”). Immigrating from multiple locations is what creates cultural diversity, or…

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    African American Music came about during the time of slavery in America. Africans from many different ethnicities and nationalities built their religious and secular rituals, festivals, and social gatherings on the foundation of song, dances, and rhythms they invented to cope with the New World realities. During the slavery era, enslaved African American became the musicians of choice for white and black celebrations because they were recognized as the best “musicians” around. Enslaved Africans…

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    Based on my understanding of the development and purpose of theatre within a culture I believe that theater’s purpose and responsibility in my culture is a way to overcome the struggle black individuals faced, to demonstrate the creativity of art, and to integrate black playwrights into the main stream of American dramaturgy. To begin, blacks used theater as a monument and empowerment to overcome their struggles. Black theatre flourished during the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and ’30s.…

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    Americans in their fight for economic justice. However, many African American’s did not agree with Washington and believed that there needed to be a more direct approach to economic growth. W. E. B. Du Bois was very outspoken against Washington’s ideas for improvement of the African American community. Du Bois believed that African American’s should fight for equality through political leadership and education instead of catering to what racist whites believed. He believed in the rights of…

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    One of the biggest book awards to receive is the Coretta Scott King Award. The Coretta Scott King Book Award is given annually to outstanding African American authors and illustrators of books for children and young adults that demonstrate an appreciation of African American culture and universal human values. The award commemorates the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and honors his wife, Mrs. Coretta Scott King, for her courage and determination to continue the work for peace and…

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