Poetry about struggle: The African-American experience
Poetry is a medium which naturally lends itself to dealing with the topic of oppression. It enables members of historically-marginalized groups, such as African-Americans, to express themselves in covert ways that challenge the dominant paradigms of the societies in which they live. Through the use of the techniques of metaphor and simile, symbolism, and other literary methods, authors such as Paul Lawrence Dunbar, the author of "We Wear the Mask: and Langston Hughes, the author of "A Dream Deferred" could speak the unspoken truths about the racial obstacles which they were forced to deal with on a daily basis. The modern African-American poet Rita Dove's work is more elliptical and less explicitly referential to politics in her works like "Persephone, Falling -- " than that of Dunbar's and Hughes' but still touches on common themes of struggle, namely how one 'fall' from purity can result in the ruin of a human being, particularly an African-American whose sexuality is demonized by society.
In Dunbar's poem "We wear the mask," Dunbar contrasts the inner torment of African-Americans living in a prejudiced society with that of the social facade they are forced to wear living with whites. "WE wear the mask that grins and lies, / It hides our cheeks and shades our eyes, -- / This debt we pay to human guile; / With torn and bleeding hearts we smile, / And mouth with myriad subtleties." The smile is both a figurative and a literal mask. During the age in which Dunbar wrote -- in the post-Reconstruction Era but before the Harlem Renaissance -- most of the available jobs for African-Americans were in occupations such as bellhops and maids....
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