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The Effects Of Music In Men We Reaped By Martin Luther King

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Music has the ability to soothe a person’s soul, and it can get someone’s spirit excited and ready to fight as well. Transcending genres such as Gospel, Rap, Blues, and Jazz, to name a few, music has enabled African-Americans to assist this burden-plagued race to overcome such obstacles as slavery, racism, and issues of identity. When a human being has nothing else to call their own, they have music in the heads that help them to overcome any problem that they may face. Jesmyn Ward used music in her novel Men We Reaped, to show the depressing culture of her community at the time, and James Weldon Johnson used music to help his unnamed narrator to demonstrate how his identity shifted. Additionally, Martin Luther King added lyrics to his sermons in hopes of having his parishioners to remember that God was listening to their troubles. In light of these insertions of music by various authors, how music creates in a troubled race a fighting spirit in an effort to beat an oppressive situation, and what are the effects of music during social upheaval will be addressed in this essay. In his essay “Remaining Awake Through a Great Revolutions,” Martin Luther King references the Negro hymn “We Shall Overcome” (277). The effect of alluding to this particular song has great baring given the topic of King’s sermon. Here, he is reminding the congregation that the fight to overcome poverty, racism, and wars that aren’t of their creation of the fact that their troubles will eventually come

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