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Langston Hughes Silhouette

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Many writers of the past and even today have attempted to openly talk of African American racial biases, hatred and aggression issues. Langston Hughes was very successful in shinning the light in this subject through his poem “Silhouette” which was written in 1949. Through his selective yet literal choice of words Hughes created a powerful and haunting image of African American injustice and atrocities.
The original context of “Silhouette” was an indirectly stated and strong outcry that persuaded the reader to openly view the injustice towards blacks, in this case the event of hanging a black man. The poem was really powerful in part because of the hostile era during the early and late 1940s where being near white women was forbidden and for which several African Americans especially in the South were lynched or brutally punished. This aspect grabbed the essential audience and created the perfect atmosphere to deliver his message through the poem, because all …show more content…

In the poem, told in the point of view of a white man he talks to a white woman explaining to her that a black man was hung, act done in “protection” of her womanhood “For the world to see... How Dixie protects its white womanhood”. He also justifies the brutal actions and tells her to “Be good” which Hughes seems to do intentionally to be sarcastic because in a respectful and pleading manner he tells the white lady not to tempt a black man because of the outcomes. As well, “ do not swoon” could be interpreted in many different ways but it seems to exonerate the white “gently lady” from the actions taken against this man. The poem is very straightforward, literal and bold by explicitly narrating and portraying the hanging of a black man for the protection of a white woman. Hughes is blatant in his imagery, “they’ve hung a black man/In the dark of the moon” and “they’ve hung a black/ To a road side

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