Langston Hughes I Too

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Langston Hughes is regarded as a prominent African American figure of the early 1900s. Many of his works centered upon the struggles of working African Americans. He chose to focus on the effects of racism and the many ways that African Americans overcame such struggles. One of his most famous works entitled “I, Too” emerged in the midst of the enactment of Jim Crow laws and segregation. The poem centers around the intentional, oblivious attitudes towards segregation and further reiterates what society considered to be “separate but equal.” The tone of the poem seemingly mocks the second-class citizenship (treatment) of African Americans during that time. Blacks were sent to eat in the kitchen whenever company was present at the house. And …show more content…

The reference states “Why flesh that mirrors Him must some day die?” Countee questions how “a good, well-meaning, kind” God, who made man in his image, could reign death as a means of ending the imperfections of sin within humanity. Countee’s question-phrased reference pertains to the Great Flood that God utilized to purify the Earth and wash away the impure persons of society. “The divine image of God within mortals is an example of the frustrating plight of human existence. Although made in God's image, the human body must die” (Sienkewicz). Then, he goes on to reference the blind mole who desperately needs his vision, yet he is still able to survive. Immediately upon reading the poem, I was able to rely on my biblical knowledge to make sense of everything else throughout the poem. I concluded that the apparent unjust, inexplicable punishment dawned by God serves as an analogy for the treatment that was endured by African Americans. The poem further emphasizes that while there is not a sure explanation as to why African Americans are being treated in such manner, regardless of the circumstances, they still manage to survive and

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