Description
hello everyone
this is very late, I cant afford mistakes.
i dont think i need to explain much since it is all there in the instructions given to me by the instructor.
in the attachment there is
1-instructions
2-text as in PDF, it is better to read it all but you can also skim through it as long as you put EFFORT in the writing, i dont want to be mean but i had bad experience last time so if you need to read every then read. PS: follow the instruction, if the paper does not meet the requirements i will withdraw and fail because i am out of time.
sorry for being blunt, i need writing that is comprehensive and organized.
3 to 5 pages double space.
https://www.litcharts.com/lit/notes-of-a-native-so...
this is a summary and analysis of one of the texts.
the other is attached.
any quiestions just hit me up.
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Explanation & Answer
Attached.
Surname 1
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‘The World and the Jug’ and the ‘Notes of a Native Son’
During the semester, we have read a good number of texts some of which have left a
significant impact in me. ‘The World and the Jug’ and James Baldwin’s ‘Notes of a Native Son’
are two of the many text we read this semester. The writer of ‘The World and the Jug’ raises
concerns over the impact of Irving Howe’s essay titled, “Black Boys and Native Sons.” James
Baldwin, on other hand raises three questions, mainly concerning social effects of the essay on the
American society. This essay will highlight all the issues addressed by the authors of these two
texts and then analyze the experience of reading the two texts.
The writer of ‘The World and the Jug’ gives an honest reaction to Irving Howe’s
perspective on Richard Wright’s novel on black people. James Baldwin’s text presents Ralph
Ellison and James Baldwin as young black men who were mentored by Wright, in which Howe
admires Wright’s accomplishments but is annoyed on the favorable evaluation placed on the young
Men. James Baldwin begins his career in writing and his greatest fight is to make sure that he is
not seen as a mere Negro writer. Howe in his essay sees this attempt by Howe as an attempt to
‘free’ himself. Howe insists that Ba...