An Analysis Of Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery

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America is the land of opportunity where many people from all over the world come to live the “American Dream.” The American Dream states that everyone should have an equal opportunity to succeed regardless of social class, education, or race. In Booker T. Washington’s autobiography, Up From Slavery, he tells his story of achievement through education and how he spoke up in the hopes of bringing the two races together in a way that no one had tried before. When Washington was asked to give an address as a representative from the Negro race, he states that the one thing that he wanted to say was, “something that would cement the friendship of the races and bring about hearty cooperation between them” (449). Even after being freed from slavery, …show more content…

Langston Hughes illustrates this idea in his poem, “Theme for English B.” The fictional narrator is asked by his instructor to go home and write a page; but it must come from him (the writer) to ensure that it will be sincere. The writer has an internal conflict about him and his counterparts and how similar or different they truly are from him. This conflict is demonstrated in his words, “I guess being colored doesn’t make me not like / the same things other folks like who are other races” (Hughes 24-25). Keep in mind, the narrator is an African American student in an all-White class; making him the odd one out. However, he soon comes to realize that his race does not make him different from his counterparts. In the last stanza, as the narrator is contemplating whether his page will be colored or white, he states, “But it will be a part of you, instructor. / You are white— / yet a part of me, as I am a part of you” (Hughes 29-32). In other words, Hughes is symbolizing the fact that one is incomplete without the other and that we can learn from each other. The conjunction of fictional characters and the written page in this poem represent the unity among

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