Inequalities Then, Inequalities Now
In the poem Harlem, the author, Langston Hughes, reveals his feelings as a black writer, segregated from white writers. In the poem he includes multiple ideas reflecting how a dream deferred can have multiple endings, good, or bad. In the second stanza of the poem, he raises a question about a raisin and the sun which shows that he is still imagining his dream being fulfilled, as he hasn’t experienced that yet. This shows the inequality present in the time the poem was written. In that case it was racial inequality, and how black people didn’t receive the same treatment and basic rights that they deserved. Now, in the current day, it reflects the social inequality. It being political, gender, and even wealth inequality. This poem will always be relevant. while not in the same context, it can be used as a basis of the unfair treatment people experience worldwide.
I like how you made the connection to a present-day issue. I also like how you chose a small word like raisin and expanded on it.
ReplyDeleteHi Vanshika! I really like how you chose to analyze phrases chronologically, then compare them to current life. I felt that it helped show the relevance of the poem in this day, and was easy to follow.
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