Harlem (or “A Dream Deferred”) by Langston Hughes has many similes and instances of personification. The poem’s first simile is a question about what happens to a dream that is put on hold: “Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun”. This comparison suggest that just as a raisin loses its physical substance‚ so too does a dream deferred lose its meaning. The “dream” that Hughes probably has in mind here is for African Americans gaining equal rights. The poem’s third simile occurs in lines 5 and 6:“Does
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In the 1950s women were getting married incredibly young‚ having children‚ and becoming housewives. They woke up‚ fed and dressed their children‚ sent them to school‚ cleaned the house‚ went to club activities with their children‚ made dinner‚ then repeated it all the next day. Eventually‚ women started to feel that they were stuck in a glass cage. There was a whole world right outside their window‚ but they could not have any of it. They were told that being a housewife was everything they should
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of Staff that the US should be removed from Korea. By 1948‚ the opposing governments were established: The Republic of Korea (South) and the People’s Democratic Republic of Korea (North). Tensions between the two quickly heightened. On June 25th‚ 1950‚ after multiple failed attempts to create uprisings in South Korea‚ communist North Korean troops crossed the 38th parallel‚ invading South Korea. As Kim Il-Sung’s Soviet supported army overran South Korea‚ the US‚ interpreting the invasion as an act
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The Harlem Renaissance is the rebirth of African American culture. It happened during 1917-1935 in Harlem‚ New York. In 1914 only 50‚000 Negroes lived in New York. By 1930‚ it increased to 200‚000. The Great Migration is when Negroes had gone North to get away from their treatment in the South. In 1914-1970 over six million African Americans moved North. They left homes in the South because the economic opportunities were not good there. They made themselves known by creating a “new black
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This piece has awesome description! Some moments that I like were; "an arched entry to a kitchen decorated in 1960s linoleum the color of Hollywood sanitariums and brushed aluminum where the 1950s chrome would have been." and "the autumn walnut and chestnut fights we had when the trees in the yard dumped loads of nuts in the sleeping grass." They both let me envision these scenes as if I were there looking at them. I also really like the comparison you made of your childhood to an antique bureau
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In the 1950’s there was a massive change in culture and the start of communism was rising up. Communism during this time was everyone’s fear and because of this issue‚ everyone was starting to get all paranoia. Spies in the US atomic program were passing around secrets to the Soviet Union to set off a nationwide panic that communist spies may be invading many American institutions. In the 1950’s‚ allegations were made towards Hollywood that they were involved with the communists that was led by the
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The Harlem Renaissance is known for many unique objectives‚ but one of the most important objectives that it was well known for is how many wonderful artists’ and writers came about during that time period. One of the most famous writers or what many consider a “prolific and versatile writer” (Beckman 65) was Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes was an American poet‚ novelist‚ and play writer whose African-American themes made him a primary contributor to the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s” (“Langston
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the idea of “change” was most likely coming second to a lot of people. Many families just wanted their old lives back‚ the ones that were before the wars. That I believe held many people to be complacent at the end of the 1940’s and throughout the 1950’s. However‚ in the 1960’s and 1970’s a new generation had emerged. One
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The Harlem Renaissance: An American Experience Painter Aaron Douglas‚ the "father" of African Art‚ stated in 1925‚ "Let ’s bare our arms and plunge them deep through laughter‚ through pain‚ through sorrow‚ through hope‚ through disappointment‚ into the very depths of the souls of our people and drag forth material crude‚ rough‚ neglected. Then let ’s sing it‚ dance it‚ write it‚ paint it" ("Harlem Renaissance" 1‚ par. 4). These words of triumph and strife epitomize the state of living during the
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The Harlem Renaissance was a complex‚ diverse movement driven by African Americans who introduced their unique heritage into American culture through a flourishing of art‚ literature‚ theater‚ and music (Hutchinson‚ Encyclopedia Britannica). It was an epochal era in which for the first time in history‚ African American artists attained critical acclaim (Jackson‚ Yale New Haven Institute). Furthermore‚ the hotbed of ideas was connected to the emerging civil rights movement which followed from this
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