Black Hole Essay

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    Ellison’s Invisible Man tells the story of an intelligent black man who has been oppressed by various people throughout his life. Ellison’s novel proves to be deeply existential, showing the essence of what it means to be a human being and actually existing with others while at the same time being independent. The nameless protagonist deals endlessly with authenticity, absurdity, and alienation—conditions Ellison links to the harsh realities of being black in America. This protagonist tries to find meaning

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    By looking closely, the door seems to have some holes, similar to bullet holes. This symbolizes the fight of women against oppression. This fight hasn’t been peaceful. In fact, many women were killed and raped due to the oppressive system all over the world. The damaged door represents that. Also, by looking above

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    to gain insight into the minds, thoughts and perceptions of Munda and the white men. This allows the reader to empathise with the characters. The narrator is implicit, as he/she does not participate in the story. The events are seen from both the black and the white people’s points of view, which clarifies the reasons behind the hostile relationship between these two population groups. In this way, the reader becomes acquainted with both sides of the story. The narrator’s own attitude to the events

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    The Black Death

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    Effect of the Black Death on Society and Literature The Black Death was a gruesome plague that took over Europe killing over 20 million people. To this day scientist still do not know a cure or what exactly this disease was. It is understood that it was from fleas that were on dying rats that caused the plague. The Black Death did not only kill millions of people, it also killed the way that society functioned. It decreased the supply and increased the demand for workers (The Black Death). Thus,

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    think about when we think segregation? The first thing we’re most likely to think is schools, parks and stores right? Well it was more than that, segregation affected communities and even libraries and restaurants. Imagine it’s pre-1954, and you’re a black student walking to school. You see the bus pass but it doesn’t even drive as far as you have to walk, the kids get out and go into their heated and stable school while you think to yourself “how come our school isn’t that nice?” This was the whole

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    Imagine a hole that radiates gifts every time you visit it. Now picture that being stuffed with such force, that your gifts seem like they don’t exist anymore. In the late Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, a child named Jem Finch always peeked his head inside a tree on the street right across him. He found the tree always being filled with goodies, filling his heart with pleasure, but later filled with cement, ultimately filling Jem’s open heart with pain. Scout Finch, Jem’s sister grew up

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    acts against Black people might sounds inconceivable now, as the end to slavery once sounded, the possibility and probability are valid that most, if not all, discriminatory acts against Black people will one day in their determined and maybe even per-determined time will come to an end just as slavery did? Even so, the epitome of Derek Bell’s comments on the permanency of racism in the US in his article, “Faces at the Bottom of the Well,” have been loosely paraphrased below. Black people, you

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    By employing themes such as psychosexual fantasies, race, gender, and violence, artist Kara Walker reconstructs and explores the history and effects of American slavery on American culture. Although being called names like notorious, revolting, anti-progressive, and shameless, she continues to be a pioneer of bringing the unspeakable aspects of American slavery that are not commonly discussed and are left out of the history books to the foreground of public discussion. To understand the importance

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    The Bubonic Plague, also known as the Black Death, was a gruesome plague that took over Europe killing over 20 million people. The plague was brought over from the Black Sea by traders and with the overpopulated filth-infested Europe the Black Death thrived. “The streets all year round were covered in feces - human and animal - urine, rotting food, and corpses of animals”(Howell). To this day scientists still do not know a cure or what exactly this disease was. It is understood that it was from fleas

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    opinion, and remaining unchallenged as the South fights the North. The South held onto the idea that the black man should remain a slave, and the North fought for the black man’s citizenship. This task proved one of the most challenging the country had ever faced. The south did everything they could to undermine the workings of the North and keep the black man’s status as low as possible. The black codes were enforced which limited the rights of the newly freed slave. They were to have the rights of

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