Understanding African-American Literature: A Historical Perspective

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When thinking about the word African-American literature, to some it’s the soulfulness that flows through the blood of black people. The why the present and past can relate whether there’s a ten-year gap or one hundred years that separate us, well always have a certain connection with the past through the history that we learn from one another. What is African-American literature? Believing that African-American literature can be written by an educated individual who can provide accurate facts about the history and events of blacks. When it comes black people writing African-American literature you don’t have to be educated to write, for example in A Lesson Before Dying, an African-American who’s uneducated write literature the best way he was able to. So if an uneducated individual can write a whole chapter about his life, can the comedy skit The End, from the Key and Peele show be …show more content…

Every novel that we’ve read always had a white male who got their power by abusing innocent black people for they weren’t never convicted for the crime. In Harriet Jacobs, Incidents of a Slave Girl, we see Dr. Flint abuse his power by keeping Linda as his slave stating “You are my daughter’s property, for that I cannot sell you”. We can see Dr. Flint is driven by power for he is able to treat his slaves anyway he wants to for there are no laws against him. By Linda continually denying Dr. Flint of sex he becomes obsessed in breaking her will. By using the law that slavery grants him, he gets angry every time she denies him, and tries to find new ways to make her submit to him. feeling that if she voluntarily sleeps with him, it makes her acknowledge his mastery as a slave master. Seeing that he was powerful only because he was able to punish a group of people and get away with it without any legal consequences, made him powerful to an

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