12 Results for autobiography

'Double Consciousness' in The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man While Johnson was a highly celebrated and versatile literary figure, his most well known work is The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man. Even though this title suggests that this work was his story, it was actually a...
The Atlanta Exposition Address The Atlanta Exposition Address is the fortieth chapter of Booker T. Washington's autobiography. This autobiography was called Up From Slavery and it was written in 1901. The chapter begins by telling the reader that Booker T. Washington, the author, was in ...
Published in 1965 "Learning to Read' is an excerpt from the autobiography of Malcolm X. 1965 marks a period in American history that is tainted with widespread abuse of African Americans at the hands of White oppression. The target audience for this piece is predominately African American. Malcolm...
Langston Hughes is often referred to as of one of the most important originators and exponents of African American literature. Hughes was born in Joplin, Missouri, on 1st February, 1902. After his father deserted the family Langston was brought up by his grandmother. At an early age he was intro...
Amy Goldich In his Autobiography of an Ex-colored Man, James Weldon Johnson explores the meaning of "passing" in an American society. The reader never learns the name of the narrator in the novel, but you learn that it's of little importance. The crisis throughout the novel centers on the ...
Up From Slavery Booker T. Washington, the author of Up From Slavery, is the subject of his novel as well. In Booker's autobiography, he tells the story of what life was like growing up as a colored person after the revolution. Where most slavery novels tell stories of hardships faced while in b...
James Weldon JohnsonJames Weldon Johnson was born in Jacksonville, Florida on June 17, 1871. He was the second of three children. Johnson was an American author, lawyer, and diplomat. He was educated at Atlanta and Columbia universities. In 1898 he became the first black lawyer admitted to the bar i...
I, Booker Taliaferro Washington, was born into slavery on a small farm in the back country of Virginia. I, like many other Americans of a darker skin were considered to be a piece of property of the whites, who owned plantations in the south. After the emancipation act was passed and I was dec...
Zora Neale Hurston was a great Harlem Renaissance writer, whose work was not readily accepted in its time. Her work was not recognized and she died penniless and unknown in Florida. Even though Zora's talents of writing were not acknowledged, her work made a difference in the Afr...
The writing styles of Maya Angelou and Langston Hughes are very similar, evident in Angelou's poem, "Africa" and Hughes's poem, "Negro". Even from the titles, you can see that these poems will be about African Americans, unsurprising considering the authors. Both are a...
The African- American Community has been blessed with a multitude of scholars. Two of those scholars include Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du bois. Both of these men, had a vision for African- Americans. They wanted to see the advancement of their race of people. These great leaders just had diff...
Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois are arguably two of the most prominentAfrican Americans of the 20th century. They are both well known for their attempts to uplift theAfrican American of the United States. However, their approaches to accomplish these taskswere drastically different. This p...