THE ROARING 20S 1920 1929
ART AND CULTURE OF THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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bitter.
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tender.
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positive.
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guarded or distant.
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Detailed explanation-1: -“How it Feels to be Colored Me” by Zora Hurston has a very hopeful and cheerful tone to it. In one part of the essay, Hurston claims that she is not “tragically colored”. Showing that just because she was born with a certain skin tone does not mean she cannot amount to what she believes in.
Detailed explanation-2: -The overall tone conveyed by Hurston’s essay “how it feels to be colored me” is optimistic, pretty much self-assuring and most importantly victorious.
Detailed explanation-3: -I have no separate feeling about being an American citizen and colored. I am merely a fragment of the Great Soul that surges within the boundaries. My country, right or wrong. Sometimes, I feel discriminated against, but it does not make me angry.
Detailed explanation-4: -Hurston rejects the notion of being “tragically colored, ” which she explains as nurturing a sense of grievance or victimhood for historical wrongs. She contrasts herself with other African-Americans, who she says feel victimized by their oppression.
Detailed explanation-5: -In the essay “How It Feels to Be Colored Me”, author Zora Neale Hurston writes to an American audience about having maturity and self-conscious identity while being an African American during the early 1900’s through the 1920’s Harlem Renaissance.