From the red blood to the crimson scar: comparing the voice of protest and suffering in the works of Ida B Wells Bartnett and Ann Petry


Essay, 2010

5 Pages, Grade: none


Abstract or Introduction

Though the Civil War ended with the Emancipation Proclamation it did not however bring about the end to the fight of the African Americans to realize their rights in the actual sense of the term. Indiscrimination and injustice was still rampant in many states. Literature of the south reflected such disturbances as writers and poets took it up on themselves to protest and create awareness by the power of the pen.African American women writers too joined the cause. The press to encouraged them to express their views and voice their demands, and even helped to gain audience with an ever increasing sympathetic audience who became party to their protests against political and social exhortations

Details

Title
From the red blood to the crimson scar: comparing the voice of protest and suffering in the works of Ida B Wells Bartnett and Ann Petry
College
Presidency College, Kolkata
Course
M.A in Literature in English
Grade
none
Author
Year
2010
Pages
5
Catalog Number
V166374
ISBN (eBook)
9783640825288
ISBN (Book)
9783640825134
File size
429 KB
Language
English
Keywords
from, wells, bartnett, petry
Quote paper
Kabita Banerjee (Author), 2010, From the red blood to the crimson scar: comparing the voice of protest and suffering in the works of Ida B Wells Bartnett and Ann Petry, Munich, GRIN Verlag, https://www.grin.com/document/166374

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Title: From the red blood to the crimson scar:  comparing the voice of protest and suffering in the works of Ida B Wells Bartnett and Ann Petry



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