The African-American Poets' Struggle for the Rights of People: A Study in C

المؤلفون

  • Hameed Abdullah Mustafa College of Languages, Salahaddin University Author
  • Sherzad Shafi'h Barzani College of Languages, Salahaddin University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31918/vwg5we87

الكلمات المفتاحية:

McKay, Struggles, Racism, identity, prejudice, rights.

الملخص

This study scrutinizes selected protest poems written by the prominent black poet of the Harlem Renaissance Claude McKay (1889-1948). McKay is considered as a key literary figure of the Negro movement who played a significant role in struggling for and awakening his own people to demand their rights. His major aspiration was to end all forms of prejudice and oppression against blacks portrayed in his poems during the most effective movement in African American literary history comprising the times between 1920 to almost the mid-1930s. McKay established himself as a powerful literary voice for social justice during the Harlem Renaissance constantly struggling for people's identity and rights against the widespread prejudice, segregation, and racism against blacks in America and worldwide along with his pride in his black race and culture. These central issues had different impacts on the Harlem Renaissance and on the lives and works of those who participated in that movement; depicting how both race and racism could define the African American experience in the early twentieth century, as well. 

التنزيلات

تنزيل البيانات ليس متاحًا بعد.

التنزيلات

منشور

2024-08-29

إصدار

القسم

Original Articles

كيفية الاقتباس

Mustafa, Hameed Abdullah, و Sherzad Shafi'h Barzani. 2024. "The African-American Poets’ Struggle for the Rights of People: A Study in C". Twejer Journal 3 (3): 821-66. https://doi.org/10.31918/vwg5we87.