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Joe Turners Come and Gone

This play was an amazing play and the messages from in were phenomenal.   I learned more about the struggles that were up North after the civil war. While growing up and learning about it in school, nobody really spoke on how that African Americans were still very much discrimination and racial tension up North. Everyone would just preach about how black men, women, and children were so eager to retreat to the north in look for some kind of safety and deal with less racism. However, racial discrimination is one of the things that was similar to the North and South. It may not have been as bad as it was down South, but African Americans still dealt with conflict.    Racial conflict showed up in Wilson’s play. There is still racial conflict in this world that we live in and we need to do our best to fight it to bring it down.

Week 13

The poem "This" by Latorial Faison speaks about the unfair treatment of African American men and women in the world right now. Due to the color of our skin we our profiled and violated as human beings. Being shot, beaten, and bothered for being ourselves in our skin. For black people, it is always shoot first, then ask questions later. Being a black man in the world we live is a greater nightmare than anything else in this world.

Blog Post #3

This year was my first time experiencing Homecoming on this campus. Throughout my experience, I can say that being here with my people feels more and more pure. What I have noticed is that at an HBCU is just different. Being at an HBCU, they are so special because they were the only schools African Americans had at one point for quality education for African Americans. In other school systems in high school, you rarely hear about the real history of African Americans but at an HBCU, you learn more about African Americans. Also, at an HBCU you have a chance to see a teacher or people of power above you which shows you can be in a position like that as well. Being here, it helped me realize that no matter what happened to the people in my past, that we can always prevail.

Harlem Renaissance

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Langston Hughes, Dreams - Whether it was short or not his poem really spoke to me. What he is saying is don't let go of the dreams you have. If you let go of the dreams that you have then life is not the same and/or has no meaning. Everybody has a dreams to do something, so they should hold on to it and keep pushing forward to achieve it. Claude Mckay, America - The "her" in her poem is American. Mckay speaks about the hate and the love she has for the United States.She may hate her life her and the things that may happen here, but she still has that love for American whether she wants to or not. Langston Hughes,   Harlem- In his poem "Harlem" Hughes speaks about the change in Harlem. How prices go up, the difficulty to get a job and it being because he is colored. His life is in a complete struggle now due to the fact that he is a colored man. Now all they can do is re

Booker T. Washington

Booker T. Washington was a very inspirational African American in my mind. He was an author, an educator, and a founder of Tuskegee. He went through the burrows to be brought out to the light and become what we see as a successful black men back in that day and age. Being born into slavery, being looked at as a workhorse and not a person, it was no problem for him to go out into the world and be someone. I am glad to have learned about someone who was this dedicated to become something. He didn’t allow his background to define him. He allowed the work he did behind the scenes define who he was as a person.