(pp. 8-9)
Evocative here is the constraint of prejudice that denigrates the target into a victim and that exacerbates the surface malice of prejudice by humiliating the victim and having the potential to make him actualize his or her labeling. In a spiral of self-prophecy, the target of prejudice frequently actualizes perceptions of the offender and indeed Du Bois goes on to observe that: "the history of the American Negro is the history of this strife -- this longing to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a better and truer self" (p.9)
The last words -- "better and truer self" -- are echoes of the epochal theme that Du Bois has sounded on liberally and inspirationally in his book: the issue of hope. Prejudice has the paradoxical gift of bestowing the Negro with resilience, endurance, and the ability to fight": "alienation," comments Holt " raised to a conscious level, cultivated and directed -- has revolutionary potential" (p.306) enabling the Negro to become a "better and truer self" and to participate, as Du Bois writes, as a "co-worker in the kingdom of culture" (p.9). 'Race' and 'prejudice' are oppressive; at the end of the day, Du Bois sees hope emerge as a result.
Conclusion
Du Bois' work, The Souls of Black Folk remains an enduring classic not only due to his admirable style of writing but also due to his addressing of matters...
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