Toomer Essays

  • Jean Toomer

    1041 Words  | 3 Pages

    Governor of Louisiana during Reconstruction. The Pinchback's retired north and settled in the Negro community of the capitol. Thus, Toomer was born, as Nathan Pinchback Toomer into an upper class Negro family in Washington D.C. on December 26, 1894. Shortly after Toomer's birth, his caucasion father deserted his wife and son, and in 1996 Toomer's mother, Nina Toomer, gave him the name Nathan Eugene (which he later shortened to Jean). At the age of ten he was stricken with severe stomach ailments

  • Claude McKay & Jean Toomer

    692 Words  | 2 Pages

    Claude McKay was born on September 15th 1890, in the West Indian island of Jamaica. He was the youngest of eleven children. At the age of ten, he wrote a rhyme of acrostic for an elementary-school gala. He then changed his style and mixed West Indian folk songs with church hymns. At the age of seventeen he met a gentlemen named Walter Jekyll, who encouraged him to write in his native dialect. Jekyll introduced him to a new world of literature. McKay soon left Jamaica and would never return to his

  • Jean Toomer- An African American Writer

    1177 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jean Toomer was an African American writer. He was known as the leading American writer of the 1920s after he established his book "Cane" which inspired authors of the Harlem Renaissance. Jean Toomer was born on December 26, 1894 as Nathan Pinchback Toomer. His mother was the governor of Louisiana during Reconstruction and the first U.S. governor of African American descent (Jones 1). In 1985, Toomer's father abandoned him and his mother. He forced them to live with his mother cruel father in Washington

  • Analysis Of Harvest Song By John Toomer

    1286 Words  | 3 Pages

    Like many average White American, Toomer was not recognized by the African American people and had no intentions to taking him or his book seriously because of his preference of being white. Toomer, like other poets and playwrights, has been very successful in describing significant events through his use of vocabulary and vision. Toomer uses different literary devices to give a visual and emotional feeling of the reaper and his hunger

  • Strong Horse Tea, by Alice Walker and The Suicides of Private Greaves, by James Moffett

    1203 Words  | 3 Pages

    why don't that doctor come on here?" Rannie keeps on hoping, and not allowing Sarah, the witch doctor to help her. Rannie believes that Sarah help will be evil, and that the white doctor will soon come. 'We going to have us a doctor,' Rannie Toomer said fiercly, walking over to shoo a fat winter fly from her child's forehead. 'I don't belive in none of that swamp magic.' Rannie is unaware of who she is and how others view her. She does not realize that the color of her skin is oppressing

  • Toomer's Seventh Street, Depicts Life and Issues in the Prohibition Period

    1006 Words  | 3 Pages

    Toomer's Seventh Street, Depicts Life and Issues in the Prohibition Period Toomer captures very deep thoughts in his writing in fairly simple language. The way he works his ideas into the text is amazing. In "Seventh Street," an excerpt from his larger work, Cane, Toomer blends ethnic ideas together while speaking about issues that involve the whole public spectrum. He begins with a four-line verse that draws the reader in and helps him to visualize the setting. Money burns the pocket

  • Comparing the Blues and Jean Toomer's Cane

    2007 Words  | 5 Pages

    in my Bowl," "Gimme a Pigfoot and a Bottle of Beer, "when placed next to a work of such literary boldness as Cane; a work that William Braithwhite gushingly refers to as "a book of gold and bronze, of dusk and flame, of ecstasy and pain, and Jean Toomer is a bright morning star of a new day of the race in literature" (Baker 16). A closer examination of both forms reveal startling similarities in theme, structure and content and that most important attribute - spirit.

  • The Modern Experience in Jean Toomer’s Cane

    1095 Words  | 3 Pages

    Ohio, an earlier work from the modernist canon. A close reading of Cane’s structure and thematic content suggests that the importance of sophistication and companionship found in Winesburg, Ohio epitomize the aspirations of modern maturity that Toomer recognized. Though Cane’s diverse characters aspire to find love and the sophisticated, complex truth of life, it is the misunderstanding of these ideas that connects the stories. In what may be the most obvious formulaic consistency in the collection

  • Alice Walker

    661 Words  | 2 Pages

    didn’t see yet. This plan was for them to identify their artistic ability, whether if it was through singing, writing or making quilts. Throughout the essay, “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens,”Alice Walker’s mentions her foremothers. Women like Jean Toomer, Phillis Wheatley and Zora Neale Hurtson, who were all either poets or writers. Mike Fike has also reco...

  • Use of Imagery in Jean Toomer's Cane

    2441 Words  | 5 Pages

    dreamlike derivatives form the connective imagery joining light and dark, day and night, black and white. It is the kind of imagery that most closely articulates what George Hutchinson called Toomer's dream of a new "American" race in his essay "Jean Toomer and American Racial Discourse" (227). He says, "Toomer's vision of a coming merging of the races makes perfect sense within the framework of the first section of Cane: the dystopia of the contemporary South implies a corresponding utopia" (234).

  • An Analysis of Jean Toomer's Cane

    1695 Words  | 4 Pages

    An Analysis of Jean Toomer's Cane In the prose fiction Cane: Jean Toomer uses the background of the Black American in the South to assist in establishing the role of the modernist black writer.  While stylistic characteristics such as ambiguity of words and the irony of the contradictory sentences clearly mask this novel as a modernist work.   Toomer draws upon his experiences and his perspective of the life of Blacks in Georgia to create a setting capable of demonstrating the difficulties

  • Reapers Jean Toomer

    1539 Words  | 4 Pages

    use of the word “black”, in reference to both men doing harvesting work in the fields, and the beasts of burden that help them. Within this poem, Jean Toomer effectively employs repetitions of key words, phrases, and ideas, thus evoking within the reader feelings of both monotony and starkness, as the “Reapers” of the title go about their work. Toomer also creates, through the poem’s images, a sense of unceasing mechanical motions (i.e., motions by human beings as well as by the sharp harvesting machinery

  • Karintha's Plight

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    In Cane by Jean Toomer, women are, as critic Meagan Abbott writes, “damaged by functioning primarily as vessels of others’ meaning.” Using a combination of prose and poetry, Toomer metaphorically alludes to the affects of sexuality on Karintha, the protagonist of the first short story in Cane, “Karintha,” over time. Because of her sultry beauty, Karintha is prematurely thrust into the sexual arena through no doing of her own, becoming burdened rather than invigorated by her beauty. Her early exposure

  • A Look at the Character Karintha in Jean Toomer's Cane

    1013 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Look at the Character Karintha in Jean Toomer's Cane Jean Toomer's Cane begins with a vignette entitled "Karintha" about a young woman who grows up too quickly. The first paragraph tell us that "men had always wanted her, this Karintha, even as child...." From the description that is presented, it appears that she was always beautiful and desirous to men, even when she was a mere child. Men of all ages wanted her from the time she was young - the young men couldn't wait until she was old

  • Karintha By Jean Toomer Sparknotes

    581 Words  | 2 Pages

    Essay Throughout his short story, Karintha, Jean Toomer explores the theme of fragmentation. Throughout Karintha, Toomer fragments time to convey Karintha’s fast maturation. Toomer abruptly moves from one time period to another, listing only Karintha’s age for reference. He starts with Karintha as a child. He writes that men wished to “ripen a growing thing too soon”, or they wanted her to grow up fast so they could sleep with her. Instantly, Toomer cuts to “Karintha at twelve”. This seems too fast

  • Theme Of Color In Jean Toomer's Cane

    651 Words  | 2 Pages

    defects in society, Jean Toomer transforms the image of blacks and brings into light the different colors of race that allow the reader to see that all people of humanity come in different colors. In Jean Toomer’s Cane, he expresses mosaic color in his writing that signifies humanity comes in different colors. There is no race; only ones’ ethnicity. In his writing he uses color such as, “Her skin is like dusk…”,” Hair—silver-gray…”, and “Red nigger moon. Sinner!” (Toomer, 1170-1187)— through these

  • Summary Of Jean Toomer's Fern

    919 Words  | 2 Pages

    Jean Toomer was raised by a single mother and grandfather, for he “never knew his father” (958). He never completed a college degree despite attending numerous universities and colleges. Before writing his critically acclaimed work, Cane, Toomer used his talent to write for articles and magazines and was also a teacher for a short –while. While attending various colleges and universities, writing articles and magazines for work, and spreading the power of education, Toomer traveled to many “African

  • Jean Toomer Essay Topics

    1135 Words  | 3 Pages

    Jean Toomer was an author of many poems. Sometimes his poetry may be difficult to understand, but if a reader can find key words they can interpret some meaning out of it. Toomer was born close to a time period where they may have said words that had different meanings than they do now. He grew up in a time period where society thought that some people should have less respect toward certain people. Toomer organized everything he knew about morality and edited it into his poetry. Jean Toomer’s

  • Blood-Burning Moon b Jean Toomer

    1245 Words  | 3 Pages

    Come out that fact’ry door” (Toomer 652). This moon blazing scarlet in the night sky certainly sets the tone for Jean Toomer’s story, “Blood-Burning Moon.” Not only does it foreshadow the violence that darkens his tale, but it also symbolizes the irresistible forces that tug at the lives of our three main characters, pushing and pulling on the chords of racial inequality that bind the nation. The moral vacuum left by the First World War compelled such writers as Toomer to focus on the individual’s

  • Conflict Of Emotions And Beliefs In Cane By Nathan Pinchback Toomer

    744 Words  | 2 Pages

    Nathan “Jean” Pinchback Toomer believed there was a potential of an “American” race, which he described as a blue hybrid that involved “the spirits of the black, white, and red races” (Hulett 6). Toomer’s writing in his first novel, Cane, gained support from many writers in the Harlem Renaissance through his reflection of African American culture. His adult years were an indecisive shuffle of postsecondary education and career opportunities.Toomer also experienced racism and criticism, including