Does Oppression and Identity Define Black History
Essay by review • March 17, 2011 • Essay • 462 Words (2 Pages) • 2,017 Views
1) Do you agree or disagree on the definition of Black History presented by "Pride and Prejudice: A History of Black Culture"_ _ "Oppression and Identity?"
I agree that oppression and identity is a vivid description of Black History. The film defines oppression "as any form of injustice that attempts to crush the human spirit" . Identity can be defined as "what identifies somebody or something". The institution of slavery is seen as a form of oppression that removes the men and women of West Africa from there homes. This act in time would strip away the black man's identity.
Slavery is a legal system in which people are traded for goods and other people. It also can be seen as an institution that almost destroyed a single race. In the late 14th and early 15th centuries the people of West Africa began to feel the early effects of this institution known as slavery. Africans where snatched from there homes and placed on slave ships. On these ships slaves where mistreated not being properly sanitized, and also where also branded like cattle.
The institution of slavery also "fed a new language and religion to the Africans." The newly acquired language being English and the religion being Christianity. By forcing Christianity on these people it forced them to abandon the religions of there homeland. With the abandonment of there religion the Africans began to loose a sense of there true home, Africa. Christianity was also seen as a way to help the Africans learn the new language English. Once the language barrier was removed the black man could be controlled. Carter G. Woodson once said, "The race that has no history becomes a negligible factor" , in essence the lost of the last piece of history, being language, blacks where loosing there sense of history. With loosing there history blacks could be seen as a negligible factor and oppression was in full swing.
As Blacks began to try and create an identity. The identity of the black man had been tainted by a new found phenomenon called double consciousness. Double consciousness is when a person views themselves through the eyes of others. This new found ideology confused blacks about their own identity. Out of the view of double consciousness came forth the idea of stereotypes. A stereotype is any description of a person or a group of people in which the idea places another group
...
...