¶ … Harlem Renaissance, Langston Hughes and his "Refugee in America," and Zora Neale Hurston and her "The Eatonville Anthology." Specifically, it will relate the thoughts of these two writers to the statement by W.E.B. Du Bois in "The Souls of Black Folk." "It is a peculiar sensation, this double consciousness, this sense of always looking at oneself through the eyes of others...One ever feels his two-ness...An American, a Negro."
THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE
Zora Neale Hurston's "The Eatonville Anthology" is a delightful account of the small Florida town of Eatonville and its colorful residents. Each short vignette discusses a different resident of the town, seen through the eyes of the narrator. Hurston is literally showing the reader the entire town as if the reader were a voyeur, standing back and watching, never seen. This is exactly what Du Bois speaks about in his quote regarding double consciousness, and Hurston vividly illustrates it here. In a small town, people are always being viewed through the eyes of the other residents, and Eatonville is no exception. These people are all-American and all-Negro, and they show their two-ness throughout the short story. For example, in a short sentence, Hurston depicts how the war (World War I) affected the town. "But the boys and girls got scattered about during the war, and now the dance the fox-trot by a brand new piano" Hurston 66). This could be any town in America, black or white; it does not matter. The war affected everyone, and life changed for the people back home when the children came home. What makes it uniquely "two" is how the people react to the...
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