The Song of the Smoke | Themes
Race
This poem’s historical significance is that it presents a bold, defiant image of the black man at a time when black men, especially in the South, were routinely persecuted and even murdered for such harmless activities as talking to a white woman or walking into a bar or restaurant reserved for whites. There has always been a social division between blacks and whites in America, and when that division has meant competition, the whites have always had the upper hand. “The Song of the Smoke,” published more than forty years after the end of slavery, shows readers...
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- The Song of the Smoke: Introduction
- The Song of the Smoke: Text of the Poem
- The Song of the Smoke: Summary
- The Song of the Smoke: W. E. B. Du Bois Biography
- The Song of the Smoke: Themes
- The Song of the Smoke: Style
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