Copper Sun is a novel by Sharon M. Draper about 15 year old Amari, whose village was taken over so she has to cope with the fact that her family is now gone. She also has to deal with the fact that she is being taken away from her true love. Throughout the story Amari displays many emotion, two major emotions are loneliness and bravery.…
Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” is an eye opening experience into the life struggles of an African American family living in the ghettos of Southside Chicago. New dreams come and go like the wind for the desperation of a better life. Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” has more topics going on in it than just a story about an insurance check worth $10,000 for the death of the father, Big Walter. Topics such as African American oppression, racial stereotypes, and segregation. An introduction of the characters consist of Walter, Ruth, Mama, Travis, Beneatha, and Mr. Lindner. The setting is in a small two bedroom upstairs apartment with barely enough space for a kitchen.…
The Theme of Money is not Everything in the Lorraine Hansberry, A Raisin in the Sun.…
In Heritage by Countee Cullen, we see this idea of God towards the ending. Part of this idea of God includes how for centuries that the "white monarchy" who believed in this divine right or the belief that God gave them the power to rule; were able to colonize Africa. For this reason, the author begins with the question of "what is Africa to me?" In a way, it is answered by this idea of precedented pain [referencing the slave trade from Africa] that allowed the African Americans to be in the situation they were in. The author states, "wishing He I served were black". In this statement, the He refers to God and the author is implying this idea if God were black and in Africa, maybe roles may have been different or more equal. Heritage attacks…
Fifteen-year-old Amari loves life in her home village in Africa. She spends her days strolling along the stream, daydreaming about her handsome future husband, teasing her little brother, and avoiding chores. But everything changes the day the pale-faced visitors arrive.…
Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun explores the universal ideas of family, dignity, and hope. Hansberry set her play in an old, once well-furnished and loved apartment in Southside Chicago after World War II. It is the story of an African American family’s struggle to prioritize futures and dreams and decide whose dream is most prevalent; once the family makes the choice to purchase a home with part of the money, they face an entirely new plight. One of the major themes of A Raisin in the Sun is the need to band together as a family and fight discrimination as a unified group, as opposed to a group that cannot stop fighting within itself.…
White slave owners in the American South during the 18th and 19th centuries often attempted to make their slaves lose their identity through a variety of means. They did this to empower themselves over the blacks, as the blacks would no longer feel like a real person with a unique and individual identity. Although the patterns of white dominance over blacks have not disappeared over time, they have changed in this regard. In the 1900s, blacks were finally express their own identity, and were not held back by whites. The play “A Raisin in the Sun,” by Lorraine Hansberry, exemplifies this. The play only provides a glimpse into the life of the Younger family and those they interact with, as it takes place over a short period of time. However,…
I found Countee Cullen's poem "From The Dark Tower" to be very interesting. The title itself gave me the impression that the speaker is some type of night watchman who was possibly watching over a field but could have just as well have been a planter who uses the planting and nature terminology to metaphorically relate to life issues. I think the first lines:…
* Najaf describes his and other refugee’s desperate plight and risks they took when they fled their countries. He recounts the harrowing escape the refugees had over land and sea, each step of the way, risking capture or death.…
If it were not for the stories past down from generation to generation or the documentations in historical books, the history of the twelve million African slaves that traveled the “Middle Passage” in miserable conditions would not exist. Olaudah Equiano contributes to this horrid history with The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano. Through this narrative, the appalling personal experience of each slave is depicted. He accomplishes his rhetorical purpose of informing the world of the slave experience in this narrative. His use of unique style and rhetorical devices in this conveying narrative portray his imperative rhetorical purpose.…
Yan, Mo. "Iron Child." _Fiction Since 1976._ Trans. Howad Goldblatt. N.p., n.d. 367 - 387. Print.…
One of the central representations of identity in Skin is Sandra’s appearance, and how being a black woman in a white family living in apartheid South Africa impacts not only on how Sandra views herself, but also how she is viewed by her family and the wider society. Sandra questions her identity and her first experiences of being an ‘outsider’ occur when she reaches school. Being subjected to ridicule and racial stereotypes not only leaves her questioning her skin color and her relationships with those she loves, but also where she fits in and belongs.…
reset the clock, I can’t remember much. Th ere are some things, of course—fractals, shards of memory, sharp as broken glass. I remember an old globe that sat on the table by my bed. I must have been five or six. It was a present from my mother, who’d received it from the author Isak Dinesen, long after she’d written Out of Africa. When I couldn’t sleep, I’d touch the globe, trace the contours of continents in the dark. Some nights my small fingers would hike the ridges of Everest, or struggle to reach the summit of Kilimanjaro. Many times, I rounded the Horn of Africa, more than once my ship foundering on rocks off the Cape of Good Hope. Th e globe was covered with names of nations that no longer exist: Tanganyika, Siam, the Belgian Congo, Ceylon. I dreamed of traveling to them all. I didn’t know who Isak Dinesen was, but I’d seen her photograph in a delicate gold frame in my mother’s bedroom: her face hidden by a hunter’s hat, an Afghan hound crouching by her side. To me she was a mysterious figure from my mother’s past, just one of many.…
The book began in a child’s point of view, perfectly told, of growing up in rural Mississippi in the 1940s. She described the landscape, the people, and her own emotions with perfect clarity. While showing racism from the perspective of a child, she included her parents’ divorce following the constant moving of her family due to the fact that her mother struggled to feed the family on her own.…
In the final stanza the meaning of her journey is given, she really wants to travel but she can’t. “She put the books back on the shelf” All the experiences given before were all fabricated in her imagination. Her ideas set alight her imagination which went wild, taking her all over the world. “She rifled the Pharaohs bones… looking down from the tops of the Andes….” Her experiences in all the…