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If We Must Die By Claude Mckay

Decent Essays

The poem “If We Must Die” by Claude McKay is not only a sonnet, but also a story that portrays so much more than what first meets the eye. The poem is discussing a group of people who are going off to battle. The narrator of the poem is preparing the group to die, but implying that they must die with honor and in a noble way. The group has been pressed into a corner and there is no way out without a fight and warns them that death is most likely in their future. This poem sheds light into the author McKay’s history and the importance of the time in which he wrote the poem. This poem uses a group of men’s final battle to discuss how one handles his last choice in life, and how he will be remembered.

Claude McKay was born in Jamaica, he emerged as a successful poet in the 1920’s and took part in the Harlem Renaissance. This was a cultural movement for African American musicians, artists, scholars, and poets. The cultural movement McKay was apart of would suggest that he knows exactly how it feels to be at battle, and to feel like you can’t win. The Harlem Renaissance was a period of rebirth for the artists like McKay and their voices were finally heard as significant contributors to the intellectual community. The movement finally gave them a chance to be remembered and to carve out a legacy for themselves. The people who are after the soldiers in McKay’s poem, are trying to defeat everything that they stand for, but the narrator argues that if they have nothing else to live

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