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Simplistic Oratorical Reflection Of Let America Be America Again

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Langston Hughes Langston Hughes uses a simplistic oratorical tone when incorporating his thoughts on inequality in America to appeal to all audiences and inform the audience on his multiethnic dream of equality in economic and political justice in America. He used the power of his poems to express his philosophies of the current American social, political, and economic conditions that would often time be antagonized if it came from a common African American. In, “Let America Be America Again” he attacks his point regarding economic and political statuses, explaining contradictory statements of America in context to real and diverse audiences. Most often his work incorporates an aspect of his development earlier on in life, ranging from …show more content…

By informing the audience he attacks the public as a whole yet the individual persons behind the issue and those who practice them. So in the end all be all, Hughes basically attacks and informs the public, private lives of individuals, and sub-groups equally. While Hughes had a vide variety of poems most seemed to to be simple and an easy read to capture the message of the poems. However, “Minstrel Man” is a little bit more difficult to decipher the imagery and symbolism being used, but by use of these same tools, one is able to understand. The poem digs is meant to settle stereotypical impressions made about minstrel slaves that were happy and energetic as they went about their day. “This poem conveys the image of a clown held fast in the colorful trap that so entertains an audience bent on seeing only gay contortions.” (Emanuel 52) This is the issue. Many would see only the jovial facade, but don't actually hear, “My inner cry?” (Hughes) They don't see the pain and suffering that they've gone through in the past and still endure as he is being use for amusement for whites. When Hughes wrote this his logic behind it was meant to be short and concise, 16 line, so that they can understand what goes on behind closed doors, hoping to enlighten the rest of the U.S. Lastly, in Hughes earlier years, about the time he was 12, his aunt brought him

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