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Audre Lorde The Fourth Of July Analysis

Decent Essays

Audre Lorde’s essay “The Fourth of July” explores a childhood family trip and the way it opened her eyes to racism in America. Lorde allows the reader to better understand her emotions in response to this by sharing specific details or language that conveys her idealized expectations of D.C., as well as her unawareness of racism she will find there. This allows the reader to empathize with her when she relates her naivety, ignorance, and uncertainty both before, after, and during her trip to D.C. During and after the trip, Lorde feels overcome by the suppressive authority of white people she perceives in the capital. Since she has not been uneducated on these subjects, Lorde feels overwhelmed by her new encounters there. Lorde’s enthusiastic mood before the trip, indicating her unawareness of what she will encounter, later dissolves into a sense confusion and exclusion from the wonderful things D.C. has to offer.
Lorde conveys the importance of her trip to D.C. both in her excitement beforehand, and its impact on her afterward. She first recreates the atmosphere of excitement by recounting the foods packed for the trip in extreme detail; her hyperfocus on unimportant details shows her youthful excitement for the trip. She recalls other minute details from her trip; for example she states, “We...did not stop until somewhere after Philadelphia. I remember it was Philadelphia because I was disappointed not to have passed by the Liberty Bell” (255). While this quickly-mentioned detail seems inconsequential on the surface, it serves a more profound purpose as it shows that she misses an influential and historical symbol of American freedom and equality. This ties into a thematic problem described in the essay -- as a new kind of interaction with racism, her trip brings to light her naivety about racism; the fact that her family skipped the Liberty Bell shows that this naivety stemmed from her parents’ inability to educate and prepare her. She states that they did not “approve of sunglasses”; their lack of “approval” indicates their inability to discuss racism with their daughters; this means that they are unable to prepare Lorde for her experiences with racism, and that when she finally does encounter it, they do

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