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Woman Of Pride By Zora Neal Hurston

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Woman of Pride
Zora Neal Hurston, an accomplished African American writer, philanthropist, scholar, and woman’s rights activist born January 7th 1891 and died in 1960. Zora is one of the founding mothers of literature in the African American renaissance. Zora’s writing is one of the most vivid writings’ of its time, her literary descriptions help the reader understand her perspective while giving the reader a “set stage” to envision each scene in the story. “How It Feels to Be Colored Me” dealt with a time period after slavery was abolished, but discrimination and segregation were still present in people’s minds. Through humor, anecdote and metaphor, Hurston addresses her personal experiences as a Negro in the 1900s. Zora grew up in a “blacks only” town in Eatonville, Florida not being able to fully differentiate between whites and blacks as an adolescent, Zora displayed herself as a jester to the white people that would only ride through town traveling to Orlando (a city in central Florida), she would dance and sing for a few dimes ignoring her family wishes of not talking to the white tourists. Though Zora’s youthful play did not mean anything to her at the time she shows her ignorant bliss of a child. Back then, she was “everybody’s Zora,” free from the alienating feeling of difference. In the latter years at the age of thirteen Zora got a taste of harsh reality of post slavery America. Zora was sent to school in Jacksonville, during a time where racism and oppression

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