In his poem "The Weary Blues," Langston Hughes conforms to and deviates from the conventions of lyric poetry in order to publicly showcase jazz music ─ which had its origins in the African-American culture ─ all in the pursuit of proving African-American humanity and demanding equality in society during the Harlem Renaissance. To a certain degree, "The Weary Blues" adheres to the rules of lyric poetry because it incorporates several rhyming couplets, generating a musical tone. In the beginning…
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The women characters of Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun (1959) are not absent of this double form of discrimination; however, as the racial issue is more at stake than gender in the play, the last one is usually forgotten in the analysis of the most part of the critics. As race can never be let apart of gender, since they are two intermingled issues in the plight of black women, we intend to analyze the implications of the two terms in the lives of the women characters of Hansberry’s…
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twentieth century was the problem of the color line” (Du Bois, 178-181). Du Bois believed the goal of African Americans was not one of integration into white America, but one of “Pan-Negroism”. Coined by Du Bois, Pan-Negroism (or Pain-African) “was to facilitate the industrial and spiritual emancipation of the Negro people” (Du Bois, 178-181). Pan Negroism was a racial unity of people of African descent. An important marker in Du Bois’ work and theory of race was the establishment of the ‘veil’…
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pre-slavery and discusses the destiny of Africans and what exactly can blacks do in a society where they do not fit in. In the first chapters of both texts, there are several similarities and differences.…
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In retrospect, while the African was busy chasing after ‘scarlet handkerchiefs’, little did s/he know that s/he was actually being systematically adapted towards raising cotton, sugar and other crops in the New World (Abodunrin, 2008:4). Furthermore, Abodunrin (2008:5), informs that…
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Real life say’s not so much”. William King, professor of Afro-American Studies of the University of Colorado-Boulder, “insist(s) it's just human nature to seek out people who look like them” he insists there's more to it: blacks and other minorities segregate themselves only because society has taught them that grouping…
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To be predisposed to a certain culture because of your bloodline seems unthinkable. However, further analysis reveals the very same system has taken the United States by storm. Like the castes of India, races avoid personal communication with those who are different. The outlook of society and the world at large depends on the skin pigment of who is asked. Finally, despite a private appreciation for other cultures, many people subconsciously hold a private and public opinion. It’s become undeniable…
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single status Self- fulfilling Prophecy: Thomas Theorem. If men define situations as real, real in their consequences Social Exchange Theory: Maximizing rewards; minimizing costs. Most satisfying when balance. Big Bang Online communication: 80% of American adults use the internet. Biggest divide: among social classes Chapter 7: Crime Strain Theory: people engage in deviance when there is a strain between goals and means Conformist: accept goals and means -Innovator: accept goals but reject means…
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model in the 1940s, to the systemic analysis of institutionalized racism in the 1960s, then to the socially constructed racism ideology in the 1990s. Historians view whiteness identity as a mutable set of conceptions and perceptions shaped by patterns of dominance and resistance within the culture at large. Historians have examined the complex discourses of race in shaping the diverse aspects of political parties, popular culture, immigrant assimilation, and American social lives. In The Wages of Whiteness…
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studies, gender, race and boundary crossing to address the causes and consequences of an increasing immigration of Latin American women to the US in recent decades. Research suggests the rapid growth of the US Latino population is driven mainly by immigration and high fertility rates among the native-born. Yet, we lack insights on the larger factors that push some Latin American nations to export mostly women and others men. Or, why do largely black and mulato nations like Panama, Dominican Republic…
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