38 Results for creative writing

Working with the Past No one knows with certainty what really happen to African-Americans during , in my opinion, the worst historical moments of our American culture. The deliberated effort to intentionally destroy the African culture was insidious, yet only through the "creative spirit&q...
It is no mystery to modern man that African-Americans have long been subjected to the prejudice of the contemptuous white man. Let\'s face it: the roots of racism can be traced back to the infancy of a nation which boldly claims \"liberty and justice for all.\" Even following the alleged emancipati...
Black Women of Our Past Since the beginning of time, men were considered superior over women. Women were not educated. Many of them did not even have chances to express their creativity. Alice Walker addresses that issue in her essay "In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens." In the essay, Walker cr...
In the essay "In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens", Alice Walker created a sense of literary tradition among black women by providing wisdom for the past, with her discussion of artistic role models. This essay has a lot interesting of themes such as spirituality, creativity, oppressio...
Born in Columbus, Georgia, McCullers grew up in a comfortable setting, for her father was a well-to-do watchmaker and jeweler. Since her childhood, McCullers had been full of creativity, demonstrated through both music and literature. As she aged and matured, writing became her true love and she e...
Many authors have views of things that have happened in past wars and present. These views and experiences that these authors view have change things in people\'s lives that read the story. Each author lives in their own culture and has their aspects. All these stories are someone related to the wor...
As a talented American author, Langston Hughes captured and integrated the realities and demands of Africa America in his work by utilizing the beauty, dignity, and heritage of blacks in America in the 1920s. Hughes was reared for a time by his grandmother in Kansas after his parents\' divorce. In...
In Alice Walkers essay, \"In Search of Our Mothers\' Gardens\", the question of what it is meant to be a black women and an artist is discussed. Walker defends past generations of black women by saying that many of them had great talent that went unnoticed due to their rank in society. These women w...
The Harlem Renaissance The Harlem Renaissance is the name given to the period after WWI and through the middle of the thirties, during which a group of talented African-American writers, musicians, and strong leaders wanting social equality all made a strong movement. Writers such as Zora Neale ...
The Harlem Renaissance marked the first time that mainstream publishers and critics took African American literature seriously. It was also the first time that African American literature and art attracted significant attention from the nation at large. Although it was primarily a literary movement,...
Society is a Trap Richard Wright once said "No more fiendish punishment could be devised... Than one should be turned loose in society and remain absolutely unnoticed by the members thereof..."(qtd in Kramer 419). Richard Wright wanted to inform Americans about the poor conditions of Afr...
During the Harlem Renaissance, although Blacks and Africans-in-America were freed by law, America was still divided among the races. Discrimination and stereotypical mentalities still flooded the minds of White America. This was the period of American history that displayed strongly the ideas of ...
Writers present the perspective of their particular community and social order. Readers of literature are enabled to see into different lives, different communities, different worlds. Black women writers take the reader into the world of women and the world of the African-American alike, especiall...
Toni Morrison's "Song of Solomon" is considered to be by critics and readers alike one of the most significant novels of the African American literature. It is the creative result of one of the most acclaimed writers of the American cultural scene. The author draws her inspiration and...
The Harlem Renaissance Or the New Negro Movement The dawn of the 1920's ushered in an African American artistic and cultural movement, the likes of which have never and will likely never be seen again. Beginning as a series of literary discussions in Greenwich Village and Harlem, the ...
The Letter From Birmingham Jail written by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on April 16, 1963, is (and was) more than a mere response to questions posed by eight members of the clergy, all of them Caucasian in ethnicity. The letter in fact was a kind of manifesto for basic human rights under the Constit...
Plot Summary Black Boy (American Hunger) is a fictionalized memoir of Richard Wright's childhood and young adulthood. It is split into two sections, "Southern Night" (concerning his childhood in the south) and "The Horror and the Glory" (concerning his early adult years in Chicago). ...
It seems unfair that the pages of our history books or even the lecturers in majority of classrooms speak very little of the accomplishments of blacks. They speak very little of a period within black history in which many of the greatest musicians, writers, painters, and influential paragon'' e...
Few men have influenced the lives of African-Americans as much as William Edward Burghardt DuBois. He was a scholar, activist, writer, and an international diplomat. During his time, he was at least involved in if not in the forefront of every movement advocating equal rights for African Americans....
Film critics, industry flaks, and even some black entertainers have tumbled over themselves shouting the praises of Hollywood for picking three blacks for its top awards. They repeatedly toss around the words \"history-making\" to describe the feat. It isn\'t. In 1973, Cicely Tyson and Paul Winfield...
The novel, Invisible Man, by Ralph Ellison explores the issue of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness through the main character. In the novel, Invisible Man, the main character is not giving a name. In our paper we will refer to him as the Protagonist. Ellison explores how unalienable rights...
Humanities 1020November 29, 2000The Harlem Renaissance and Langston HughesThe Harlem Renaissance was a great and powerful era in black history, "It was an African American cultural movement of the 1920s and early 1930s that was centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City" ("Harlem Renaissan...
As a talented American author, Langston Hughes captured and integrated the realities and demands of Africa America in his work by utilizing the beauty, dignity, and heritage of blacks in America in the 1920s. Hughes was reared for a time by his grandmother in Kansas after his parents' divorce. Inf...
There are many similarities in plot and theme in Langston Hughes' "Father and Son" and D. H. Lawrence's "The Prussian Officer." While each story is told in a very different style, the general tone is similar in each. The focal point in each story is a relationship between one man in power,...
The Harlem Renaissance can be considered on of the most significant events in African-American literature and culture in the twentieth century. While its most obvious manifestation was as a self-conscious literary movement, it also touched almost every aspect of African-American culture and intellec...