Afro-Latin American Essays

  • Afro-Latin American Culture

    945 Words  | 2 Pages

    The study of the “expressive culture” of African descended peoples in Latin America can reveal quite a lot about their history and their contributions to the historical formation of peoples and nations in modern Latin America. Their expressive culture in both Cuba and Brazil, and in much of Latin America, was initially shunned and viewed as something barbaric and distinctly ‘other.’ Cuba and Brazil in the late 19th and early 20th centuries were focused on protecting, preserving, and promoting whiteness

  • African American Folklore

    2210 Words  | 5 Pages

    African- American folklore is arguably the basis for most African- American literature. In a country where as late as the 1860's there were laws prohibiting the teaching of slaves, it was necessary for the oral tradition to carry the values the group considered significant. Transition by the word of mouth took the place of pamphlets, poems, and novels. Themes such as the quest for freedom, the nature of evil, and the powerful verses the powerless became the themes of African- American literature

  • Impact of Globalization on African Americans

    2653 Words  | 6 Pages

    For many years black people in the United States have struggled for their rights and their piece of the American dream. Now that the world is moving toward a new global era the African American person, worker and human has been left out of this turn in the century and, the system is letting them hang their selves. Globalization has made it so that anyone with the right equipment and knowledge can chat or do business anywhere in the world with just a few clicks of a couple of buttons. Globalization

  • ANALYSIS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN HEALTHCARE

    851 Words  | 2 Pages

    The article on Black America Web entitled “The state of Black America, Part 4: Health as Wealth” (Lewis, 17 Jan. 05) is mainly addressing how African Americans should get check-ups, eat a healthier diet, exercise, among other things to maintain their health. The authors main point of writing an article about health is so that African Americans will be propelled to take preventative measures to prevent and treat disease that may be debilitating or lethal, to get professional help if they are not feeling

  • Racism, Discrimination, and Social Class Explored in To Kill A Mockingbird, by Harper Lee

    1138 Words  | 3 Pages

    In the novel, To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee addresses many controversial issues. Such issues as, racism, discrimination, and social class are explored. During the 1950's in the small county of Maycomb, the mentality of most southern people reflected that of the nation. Most of the people were racist and discriminatory. In the novel, these ideas are explored by a young girl, Scout. The readers see the events that occur through her eyes. In the book, Scout's father, Atticus, tells Scout and

  • The Distinctive Voice of Zora Neale Hurston

    1002 Words  | 3 Pages

    to think- to know that for any act of mine, I shall get twice as much praise or twice as much blame"(Hurston 2). Zora Neale Hurston has a remarkably positive but realistic outlook on the duality of the African American female. She understands and therefore is aware that the African American female is greatly magnified in the blurred eyes of the white male world that distorts all of her achievements and shortcomings. Hurston was caught between the emphasis on the exotic aspects of the Harlem Renaissance

  • Importance of African American Literature Addressing the Black Experience

    3067 Words  | 7 Pages

    The role of African American literature in recent years has been to illuminate for the modern world the sophistication and beauty inherent in their culture as well as the constant struggle they experience in the oppressive American system. When writers such as Langston Hughes, W.E.B. DuBois and Alice Walker present their material, they manage to convey to a future world the great depth of feeling and meaning their particular culture retained as compared with the culture of their white counterparts

  • Black in America

    1820 Words  | 4 Pages

    religion for me. From African-American slaves to the black race now, I believe that black people have come a long way in recognizing their identity. African-American theologians and religious historians like James Cone and Gayraud Wilmore and scholars like Albert Raboteau have located within slave religion of the importance in maintaining culture for African-Americans. Cone and Wilmore proposed ideas of Black Theology. I believe that their theories show how African-Americans can gain their own identity

  • Brent Hayes Edward's The Use of Diasporal and African Diasporal

    889 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Brent Hayes Edwards essay, “ The Use of Diaspora”, the term “African Diaspora” is critically explored for its intellectual history of the word. Edward’s reason for investigating the “intellectual history of the term” rather than a general history is because the term “is taken up at a particular conjecture in black scholarly discourse to do a particular kind of epistemological work” (Edwards 9). At the beginning of his essay Edwards mentions the problem with the term, in terms of how it is loosely

  • The Role of Female African American Sculptors in the Harlem Renaissance

    1699 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Role of Female African American Sculptors in the Harlem Renaissance The Harlem Renaissance, a time of global appreciation for the black culture, was a door opening for African American women. Until then, African Americans, let alone African American women, were neither respected nor recognized in the artistic world. During this time of this New Negro Movement, women sculptors were able to connect their heritages with the present issues in America. There is an abundance of culture and history

  • Who We Are

    2048 Words  | 5 Pages

    What is position do Black American hold in society today? If Black Americans were to just disappear without a trace, would it effect America economically, politically, and socially? The answer is yes, but we would not have the power to survive on our own. The only power that we truly have is buying power in America. Black Americans are infamous for putting their money into things that are materialistic rather than things that will turn their money over. Things that will build up the community such

  • Hip hop wars

    951 Words  | 2 Pages

    or if it reflects life in a black ghetto and if it slows down advancement for African Americans in US. The author goes back and forth with the opinion of the mass on hip hop, she says people view hip hop as a music like heavy metal which people associate with violence but she refutes most of these points by showing the positives of hip hop. Hip hop originated from groups of Afro-Caribbean, and African Americans in Bronx. These musicians combined different kinds of music and used the traditions of

  • African American Youth and their Lack of Interest in Black History Month

    819 Words  | 2 Pages

    the cultural aspect of culture identity. If you was to ask someone what the culture identity of the African Americans were no matter the race of the person you asked they nine times out of ten would mention the importance of black history month, but while the races around us are able to recognize the importance of this historic month why is it that today’s generation of young African Americans don’t realize the importance of this month? The race of people it celebrates, has placed it on the back burner

  • Autoethnography In Wideman Robby, And Wideman

    1266 Words  | 3 Pages

    in Anzaldula’s essay. But what does the word really mean to us? How does the word relate to us? Our people? How do we relate to it? I am an African American and Wideman gives a good example of how it relates to African Americans. More specifically, he focuses on African American men in so-called “ghetto” neighborhoods. However not all African American men in these areas fit this stereotype. Wideman explains how these men can be overlooked as human beings and shouldn’t be instantly categorized under

  • Analysis Of Bigsby And Ruckus

    1860 Words  | 4 Pages

    like many other aspects of different cultures contains barriers that are broken only by an understanding of the context of the comedy. In order words, it is unlikely that an African would fully understand a joke by an American comedian if the joke draws from a primarily American historical or social context. Hence, what one can identify with affects what kind of jokes one can relate to. Identity is predicated on the ability to relate because identities are formed through personal interpretations

  • Symbolism In Billie Holiday's 'Strange Fruit'

    1138 Words  | 3 Pages

    written by Abel Meeropol, as a protest against lynching of African Americans. Meeropol meet Holiday in a bar, where she read the poem, and decided to make the poem into a song. The record made it to No. 16 on the charts in July 1939. This song is probably Holiday’s most famous song she ever sung throughout her whole life. In the end Strange fruit forces listeners to relive the tragic horrors of living in America as an African American. The vivid lyrics paints a picture that causes a person

  • Compare And Contrast Jhumpa Lahiri And The Next Big Story

    2067 Words  | 5 Pages

    Comparisons of Authors When people migrate to the United States from foreign countries, they often bring their customs along with them, but their children have a harder time accommodating to their culture, since they now live in a different country which is more diverse . O’Brien was born and raised in a town called Smithtown in Long Island, while Lahiri was born in London but moved at the age of two, to Rhode Island. Both of the authors had immigrant parents, who came from foreign countries looking

  • Characterism In As Everyday Use By Alice Walker

    1265 Words  | 3 Pages

    lot of time reading and writing. She was valedictorian of her class in high school which allowed her to attend Spelman, a college for black women. White attending Spelman, she became active in the Civil Rights Movement. During this time, African American women writers were becoming more popular and helped redefine readers’ understanding of the world (Baym and Levine 1081) As

  • Spirituality, Cosmology, And Christianity In Toni Morrison's 'The Bluest Eye'

    1276 Words  | 3 Pages

    Sound of Silence: an analysis of African Spirituality, Cosmology, and Christianity in The Bluest Eye Introduction Toni Morrison’s first novel The Bluest Eye fully embodies the distinct characteristics of African American Literature by artistically blending the elements of African Spirituality, Cosmology, and Christianity, providing readers with a new dimension to interpret the tragic story of Pecola. A closer look at the context shows that the motif of “silence” is evident in this novel, strongly

  • Analysis Of The 13th Amendment To The Constitution

    2256 Words  | 5 Pages

    The thirteenth amendment to the Constitution proclaims that “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.” This amendment was the piece of history that abolished slavery and did innumerable things for our country, but it also made room for something now known as black criminality. Through the thirteenth amendment emancipation was born.