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The Negro Digs Up His Past Essay

Decent Essays

I analyzed the ideological connection between Arthur Schomburg’s essay, “The Negro Digs up His Past” and an excerpt from W.E.B. Du Bois’s The Souls of Black Folk. Both essays depict the struggles African Americans faced, but also attempt to inspire African Americans to see beyond their struggles and establish their identities in America. Both essays begin by stating the issues that African Americans are facing at that time. Du Bois reflects on the way people viewed African Americans as problems and how that affected one’s own self-awareness, regardless of what they previously thought. Constantly feeling like a problem and constantly being reminded of it elicits a lack of self-worth. Du Bois says, “That sky was bluest when I could beat my mates at examination-time, or beat them at a foot-race, or even beat their stingy heads. Alas, with the years all this fine contempt began to fade; for the worlds I longed for, and all their dazzling …show more content…

Both come together to fulfill goals set in “Defining Black Identity in 21st Century America” by Ewauare Osayande. The first two motivate and inspire African Americans to be proud of themselves, how far they have come, and the effort they have taken into pioneering society. The main objective Osayande wants to convey is to establish an identity while resisting dehumanization and power against them (Osayande 6). Du Bois’s essay describes the feeling of a double-consciousness (Du Bois 11).” This helps establish the unique identity that Osayande wanted to accomplish. One can mix together the African culture with the American culture and create something unique. Schomburg’s idea of revisiting history and what ancestors experienced will also help accomplish that goal. His essay discusses the immensely-appreciated initiative taken in the past that serves as a prideful accomplishment to help African Americans realize their potential

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