Myers and DuBois - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Myers and DuBois

Description:

Myers and DuBois HMXP 102 Dr. Fike Next Time Three texts: Loury McIntosh Morrow and Tyson That is more material than we can discuss in one period, but that is okay. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:146
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: fik77
Category:
Tags: dubois | dubois | myers

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Myers and DuBois


1
Myers and DuBois
  • HMXP 102
  • Dr. Fike

2
Next Time
  • Three texts
  • Loury
  • McIntosh
  • Morrow and Tyson
  • That is more material than we can discuss in one
    period, but that is okay. We will concentrate on
    Loury and McIntosh, but an analogy to Morrow and
    Tyson is also important to consider. MT are also
    important for you to read as a prelude to CRTW.

3
Vocabulary in Myers and DuBois
  • deprecate (Myers, par. 5)
  • peremptorily (DuBois, par. 2)
  • sycophancy (par. 2)
  • Uncle Tom
  • demagogy (par. 5)
  • savant
  • cabalistic (par. 9)
  • inculcate (par. 11)
  • sturm und drang (par. 13)
  • dyspeptic (par. 13)

4
Background information
  • Background on Myers http//www.davidmyers.org/Br
    ix?pageID1
  • Background on DuBois http//www.biography.com/peo
    ple/web-du-bois-9279924

5
W. E. B. DuBois
  • Dates  1868-1963
  • Fisk College in Tennessee (B.A.)
  • Harvard (M.A.)
  • University of Berlin
  • Harvard (Ph.D.) dissertation  The Suppression
    of the African Slave Trade in America
  • Eventually taught at Atlanta University
    (sociology)
  • "acknowledged as the father of Social Science"
  • 1903  The Souls of Black Folk
  • Part of the NAACP at its beginnings

6
Group Activity Understanding Myers
  • Three groups (10 minutes)  Try to work with
    people whom you do not know well.  Each group
    should summarize what Myers says about one of the
    following things and then report to the class. 
    Find at least two key passages to support your
    position.  If you finish your topic early, begin
    discussing one of the other topics. 
  • Group 1  Community
  • Group 2  Prejudice
  • Group 3  Conformity

7
Application of Myers to DuBois
  • How do Myers's statements about community,
    prejudice, and conformity apply to DuBois's text
    (or not)?  Stay in your groups and keep working
    and then report to the class after 10 more
    minutes.

8
Whole Class Understanding DuBois
  • Read par. 3 twice.
  • Let us work together now to establish definitions
    of terms that DuBois uses 
  • seventh son (next slide)
  • "second-sight"
  • "self-consciousness"
  • "double-consciousness"
  • "twoness

9
Seventh Son
  • The Legend states the 'Seventh Son of a Seventh
    Son' is the unborn one in the poetic sense, 'He'
    being preordained by his birthright too be a
    'Maker of Things' endowed with gifts of 'second
    sight' 'predicting the future' 'healer' 'lucky'
    and a 'devil may care attitude' being referred to
    as the 'Divine One' or the 'Chosen One' who has a
    'special purpose in life' for the 'Lord of Hosts'
    who is also cursed by the good evil forces
    battling for his eternal soul.
  • Source http//www.mystical-www.co.uk/7son.htm
    (all errors are in the original text)

10
Next Step DuBoiss Allusions
  • What allusions strengthen DuBois's argument? 
    What do these allusions imply regarding the
    nature of human disillusionment?  What power do
    they lend to DuBois's argument?
  • Quotations that suggest the problems that black
    folks face in the present
  • Par. 2  "The shades of the prison-house closed
    round about us all..." (Wordsworth's "Intimation
    Ode").
  • Par. 10  "In those sombre forests of his
    striving his own soul rose before him, and he saw
    himself,--darkly as through a veil..." (1
    Corinthians 13).
  • Quotations that suggest black folks hope for a
    better future
  • Par. 6  Emancipation was the key to a promised
    land of sweeter beauty than ever stretched before
    the eyes of wearied Israelites" (Exodus)
  • Par. 9  "...a pillar of fire by night after a
    clouded day" (Exodus 13)
  • Par. 9  "the mountain path to Canaan" (Genesis
    12)

11
Large Group Connection to Plato
  • What would Plato say about the following
    quotation (par. 12)? 
  • Whisperings and portents came borne upon the
    four winds  Lo! we are diseased and dying, cried
    the dark hosts we cannot write, our voting is
    vain what need of education, since we must
    always cook and serve?  And the Nation echoed and
    enforced this self- criticism, saying  Be
    content to be servants, and nothing more what
    need of higher culture for half-men?

12
Connection to Lakoff and Johnson
  • We concluded that Lakoff and Johnson's work on
    metaphor supports the idea that "thoughts are
    things."  In other words, how you think about
    something shapes your reality. 
  • In the context of DuBois's work, then, black
    people are not only receiving objects but also
    acting subjects with the power to determine their
    own situation and destiny.  Are there glimmers of
    this idea in DuBois's text?
  • Consider, for example, the following from par. 8
  • the shadow of a deep disappointment rests upon
    the Negro people,--a disappointment all the more
    bitter because the unattained ideal was unbounded
    save by the simple ignorance of a lowly people
    (my emphasis).

13
Whole Class Critique of DuBois
  • Do you disagree with anything in his text?  The
    Souls of Black Folk is over one hundred years
    old.  Are DuBois's ideas still current? 
  • Identify specific places in his text where you
    find things that are either accurate or
    questionable in terms of your contemporary
    experience. 
  • For example, are African Americans still guilty
    of "often wooing false gods and invoking false
    means of salvation" (par. 5)?

14
Broadening
  • Although DuBois is writing about black folk, is
    it fair to say that the struggles he recounts are
    the story of all people, no matter what their
    specific race might be?
  • In other words, even if you are NOT a black
    person, is DuBois telling YOUR story too?

15
Last Slide
  • How do you understand yourself better, no matter
    what race or gender you are, as a result of
    reading and discussing the texts by Myers and
    DuBois? END
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com