Washington's Atlanta Compromise Speech And W. E. B. Dubois

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The time period when Booker T. Washington gave his Atlanta Compromise Speech and W.E.B. DuBois wrote ‘The Souls of Black Folk’, it was a big step to talk about equality and social problems of the black race; which led Washington not to state those topics directly to the Southern white audiences at the moment. Even though Washington and DuBois ultimately were in the same boat for the black race, they expressed and represented oppositely. While Washington decided to have oblique approach in the parts of politics, rights, and education, DuBois exclaimed utter equality unswervingly and brutally. As DuBois was frustrated and furious by Washington’s speech, He rebuked Washington severely for asking the black race to give up three things for the …show more content…

This part of DuBois’s essay, “As a result of this tender of the palm-branch, what has been the return? In these years there have occurred: the disfranchisement of the Negro, and the legal creation of a distinct status of civil inferiority for the Negro” shows that DuBois hastens the black race to express and to assert civil rights and liberty. The adjective ‘tender’ expresses that Washington’s speech is meaningless and weak to have suffrage and other rights of the black race. The interrogative sentence helps to bring and to join the black readers to have active attitudes into the social problems in the essay. ”He insists on thrift and self-respect, but at the same time counsels a silent submission to civic inferiority such as is bound to sap the manhood of any race in the long run” shows that DuBois severely criticizes Washington for not emphasizing the insistence on political power and civil rights, which makes DuBois to think Washington agrees with civic inferiority of the black race in some points. However, a silence means neither a submission nor an acceptance to civic inferiority. As the Southern white audience of the Atlanta Compromise Speech feared and concerned about the blacks being uppity, Washington as the invited a sensational black speaker was not able to suddenly throw both of rights and political issues to them. Moreover, it was at the political public place- the Cotton State and International Exposition, where he gave the Atlanta Compromise Speech. If he announced that he was going to state political power and civil rights at the speech, he could not be the spokesman at the Exposition. Even if Washington talked about civil rights and the

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