РефератыИностранный языкAfAfrican American Writers Essay Research Paper The

African American Writers Essay Research Paper The

African American Writers Essay, Research Paper


The African- American Community has been blessed with a multitude of scholars.


Two of those scholars include Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. Du bois. Both of


these men, had a vision for African- Americans. They wanted to see the


advancement of their race of people. These great leaders just had different


viewpoints as to how this should be accomplished. Mr. Washington?s viewpoints


are based on his own personal experience and understanding of politics. Mr. Du


bois? viewpoints came from his knowledge of the importance of education and


its ability to break down barriers of color. Washington and Du bois wanted to


see the advancement of the African-American people. The question was ?How


could they advance?? There is a twelve-year age difference amongst the two


gentlemen. I could see the difference that a decade could make in the mindsets


of the two gentlemen. Washington is the elder of the two. He was apart of the


slavery system not merely a product of it. He was a slave who was freed. A man


without neither a history, nor a surname to call his own. Du bois was born into


a system of freedom. He never experienced having a master or the lack of freedom


to move about as he pleased. He came into the world and saw problems. He


didn?t see the long path that had been traveled to get them to the point that


they were at currently. Therefore these men saw different ways of accomplishing


their goals as a race. In Booker T. Washington?s autobiography Up From Slavery


, he shares with the reader an abundance of information as to how he became the


man he was. He was born on a plantation in Franklin County, Virginia. At the


earliest moments of his life, he was a laborer, cleaning the yards, carrying


water, and taking corn to the mills. Booker T. Washington talks about the burden


of freedom. He talks about the attitudes of the slaves towards their masters


after emancipation. When the slaves learned they were free there was a feeling


of excitement, followed by one of the reality that they were now responsible for


providing for their families, shelter, food, clothing and a better way of life.


He talks about the connection and bond that they continued to share, as the


slaves began to prosper and the master and his family began to suffer.


Washington remembers his new life in West Virginia. The part where is education


was put on the back burner as a result of a need of income to support his


family. But he also remembers his will and determination to gain an education at


any cost. This resulted in him going to school at night and

traveling several


miles in order to gain a proper education. Washington eventually gained an


education at Hampton University, and went on to teach. He was also head of


Tuskegee University. Mr. Washington?s life experience?s taught him that


everything has a time and a place. He painted a picture of a boy in a filthy


room with torn and ragged clothes, reading a French book. He believed that man


must have skills and should be able to provide for himself and his family. He


was speaking of economic freedom. He was speaking of working with white people,


to try to make a better place for both races. In many ways, I think he felt it


was more important to have food on your table rather than books in your hands.


Mr. Washington knew that in order for African-Americans to prosper, whites would


have to be involved. In order for a man to get up off the ground he must first


convince the man holding him down to take his foot off his throat. Mr. W.E.B. Du


bois was indeed a scholar and revolutionary. He was born in Great Barrington,


Massachusetts. He was a graduate of Fisk University and the first Black to


receive a doctoral degree from Harvard University. Du Bois?s research into the


historical and sociological conditions of black Americans made him the most


influential black intellectual of his time. His book The Souls of Black Folk


written in 1903 is a powerful collection of essays, in which Du Bois describes


the efforts of African- Americans to reconcile their African heritage with their


pride in being U.S. citizens. In this book he also contended that Washington?s


push for African-Americans to relinquish political strength and the quest for


civil rights temporarily for the building of wealth was wrong. Du bois believed


that ?he right to vote, civil equality and the education of youth according to


ability were more important than the accumulation of wealth. Du bois felt that


if the ignorant white man could vote so should the ignorant black man. Du bois


continued to fight for the rights of African- Americans. He was instrumental in


the founding of the NAACP. One was conservative. One was idealistic. One was a


politician at heart. One was an abolitionist born too late. Both saw the


importance of education. They just differed on what kind of education was most


important to their race of people. The main goal was the advancement of their


people. In both men?s cases, their insight and ideas did so much in the aiding


of our advancement as a race of people and as a culture within a culture. They


were both two great men with the same problem, with different solutions.

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