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I am the nigger. Singer of songs, Dancer…
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read full text >>
Carl Sandburg
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Comments about this poem (Nigger
by
Carl Sandburg
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Tim O'brosnahan (5/28/2009 9:17:00 AM)
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During the Chicago race riots of 1919, Carl Sandburg became a voice for the black community and wrote an article that was on the front cover of the Chicago paper he wrote for. This article inflamed many whites because he wrote more of the truth than other biased writers. His love of people of diverse races and ethnic backgrounds is well documented in many of his poems.
In Nigger, he writes of ther inner strength and the proudness of blacks in America. Quite possibly his enormous studies and writings of Abraham Lincoln gave him more insight than the average man, both black and white, but his gentleness in writing this poem ends with a sharpness of memory for a time that was one of the darkest for our country.
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Jane Moon (5/15/2009 12:50:00 PM)
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Sandburg's compassion and respect for the common man shows here in the many dimensions of hard work, love, music, joy, enjoyment of family and life, memories from past life in freedom before slavery (Africa) and hardships of slavery, up to the current day. The 'nigger' here is a word of respect and friendship. He is a man to be admired and accepted just like anyone else.
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Lewis Colyar (5/10/2007 1:18:00 AM)
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Carl Sandburg had a great deal of compassion for the African American people.
He was one Langston Hughes favorite poets. In this poem he is speaking of
the African-American hardship that he is seeing. He is not using the N word in the manner to demean. Rather he is writing how we are/ were disenfranchied. Walt Whitman also wrote with the same passion.
Langston hughes poetry Society of Pittsburgh
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Zandra Faulks (6/25/2006 9:46:00 AM)
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I enjoy Sandberg's poetry, but I never know how to take this one. I do not know enough about his life or what his politics or social perspective was to understand if his use of 'nigger' and pickaninnies' was for effect or a betrayal of personal racism. Anybody?
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