Joplin

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    Page 22 of 25 - About 248 Essays
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    The Harlem Renaissance was a turning point for the United States. The influential leaders, authors, and members of the Harlem Renaissance introduced a new way of life. Intertwined with the Roaring 20s, the Harlem Renaissance experienced new technology and inventions. With the help from new technology, the Harlem Renaissance period was able to accomplish much more than previous eras. The Harlem Renaissance also influenced many different areas. In particular, the Harlem Renaissance influenced the…

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    Close your eyes for just one mere second, then reopening them just as quickly as you had closed them. In a milli-second many things can occur, and in an entire second thousands of things can take place. This is what was occurring to many African Americans in the nine teen hundreds including poet Langston Hughes. From being captured/taken from their homeland, to harsh back breaking slavery, to freedom, and then civil rights. Focusing on American History, the United States has gone through…

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    1963 – 1973 A Decade of Disillusion The era that I chose to write about was from 1963 to 1973. I felt that this was the decisively time period in America history. The 60’s were ushered in riding on the coattails of the 1950’s and was felt would carry on the hopes and dreams of the post-WWII economic growth which America was enjoying . The 1950’s ideas of bliss in suburbia with dinner promptly at 6 and of a mother doing housework in pearls were about to be shattered by the events of the…

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    Drug testing has become known as an essential part of gaining employment. There are some places of business that require drug testing, and there are few who do not require drug testing. It makes the most sense that the fields getting drug tested would involve public safety. Fields involved in public safety can include, but is not limited to: police officers, firefighters, emergency paramedics, and emergency dispatchers. This may also include doctors, nurses, nurses’ assistants, and the majority…

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    in the Harlem Renaissance. Langston Hughes grew up in a time period during racial segregation. He also got to experience integration. Hughes did not only struggle in society, but he also had family struggles. Langston was born February 1, 1902 in Joplin, Missouri. He died at the age of sixty-five. He was born to the parents of James…

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    Langston Hughes was a private, mysterious poet, whose sexuality became the focus of curiosity by his critics and readers before and after his 1967 passing. While there was limited scholarly works that accurately biographed his life, there was indeed a plethora of critical reviews and analyzations of his writing itself by various writers and poets (Summers 3). His work was different in that it mostly remained gender ambiguous and defied stereotypes about what it meant to be a man, a woman,…

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    In Joplin, Missouri, on February 1, 1902, James Mercer Langston Hughes was born to the parents of James N. Hughes and Caroline M. Hughes. Hughes parents decided it was best for them to separate shortly after his birth. Hughes father made the decision to leave The United States due to the racial discrimination in which African Americans endure, he later settled in Mexico. Hughes was mainly raised by his grandmother, Mary Patterson Langston until she passed away in his early teen years. He then…

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    Jazz Revolution

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    such as “Stars and Stripes Forever,” “The Washington Post,” “El Capitan,” and “The Thunderer.” (Marine Band Corps) Marching band left an influence on Ragtime music with its sense of rhythm and drum correlation. One of the first Ragtime composer Scott Joplin (b.1868–1917), an African American musician, wrote one of the first big ragtime hits, “Maple Leaf Rag” and then three years later, “The Entertainer.” The music was very loveable in the United States. However, the mass popularity in Ragtime…

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    Philosophy Of Blues Music

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    A terrible mistake started something big and strong. Racism has gone on for decades and it was something normal. Nobody said anything about it and even slaves themselves. They didn’t make it a big riot. They didn’t have the right. They were nothing for the “yankees.” So the slaves started something different. Something quiet but loud. They sang! They wrote songs about their slave life and racism that they had to see every day. Their songs had different codes that only, but only they could…

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    When I first heard Billie Holiday sing Strange Fruit, I was immediately saddened by her tone. It instantly gripped my attention because she started the song off referring to a “strange fruit.” This reference automatically made me listen closely to see what “fruit” she was speaking of. The next line talked about blood on the trees’ leaves and roots which instantly stirred up feeling of sadness. This song describes the lynching of African Americans in the South. I asked myself, what could a man…

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