A Renaissance man but born in Jamaica, grow up in the times where blacks talked about the injustices that they faced in their time, and expressed their culture. At the age of seventeen he moved to the U.S. where he spent most of his years writing. Claude quickly learned that racism was a social norm and segregation was a none to be a part of life. The poem “If we must die” on page 1005 vol.1. “If we must die, let it not be like hogs Hunted and penned in an inglorious spot,”. Was understood to be written towards the white man, to show the fact is, they are not fighting for survival; they already know they will die. This poem is a great example, showing how racism was a huge factor on how authors, artist, and musicians lived their …show more content…
Through all the traveling and humiliation that they went through to just sit there and try to explain to other blacks that this place is not for them. Exactly how the whites came over to Africa to bring them back over to America. Having children and being lied to about who they were as a person. How whites didn’t preach the things they believed in and let blacks run around the world trying to figure what is their purpose in life. For example, in the poem “Outcast” by Claude McKay , page 1007 states “Something in me is lost, forever lost, some vital thing has gone out of my heart, and I must walk the way of life a ghost”. Hunted by a past that they knew nothing about. Trying to run away from the problem in the white man’s maze, to only find more reasons to feel lost. For a very long time as a race they put aside their own pleasure for a life that wasn’t even