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Gwendolyn BrooksA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Heritage” by Gwendolyn Bennett (1922)
In this poem by Harlem Renaissance writer Gwendolyn Bennett, Bennett represents an imagined Africa as a place of beauty. Like Brooks, Bennett associates Africa with authentic Black American identity. Her Africa is one from which Black Americans are estranged, and the description of the inhabitants gathered around a “heathen fire” (Line 11) of “a strange black race” (Line 12) makes it clear that the speaker’s sense of identity is decidedly Western.
“Middle Passage” by Robert Hayden (1962)
Hayden, a peer of Brooks, takes the revolt of enslaved Mende people (from the Western coast of Africa) on the slaving ship Amistad as it crossed the Atlantic as his topic. Using fragments—passages from the ship’s log, snatches of Black spirituals, direct quotes from court records, and the names of slavers’ ships—Hayden constructs a Black history that from the beginning shows the “deep immortal human wish / the timeless will” (Lines 161-62) of people of African descent to be free. In the poem, their only wish is to survive a “[v]oyage through death / to life upon these shores” (Lines 165-66). Brooks mentions the journey in the holds of slave ships obliquely, but the speaker in her poem is less certain about survival in the Americas as the greatest achievement of the ancestors of Black Americans.
By Gwendolyn Brooks
A Bronzeville Mother Loiters in Mississippi...
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A Sunset of the City
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Boy Breaking Glass
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Cynthia in the Snow
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Maud Martha
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my dreams, my works, must wait till after hell
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Speech to the Young
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The Ballad of Rudolph Reed
The Ballad of Rudolph Reed
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The birth in a narrow room
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The Blackstone Rangers
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The Chicago Defender Sends a Man to Little Rock
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The Crazy Woman
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The Lovers of the Poor
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The Mother
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the rites for Cousin Vit
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To Be in Love
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Ulysses
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We Real Cool
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