Saturday, July 20, 2019
Paul Laurence Dunbar :: essays research papers fc
 Paul Laurence Dunbar        Outline    Thesis: The major accomplishments of Paul Laurence Dunbar's life during 1872 to  1938 label him as being an American poet, short story writer, and novelist.    I. Introduction II. American poet       A. Literary English       B. Dialect poet            1. "Oak and Ivy"            2. "Majors and Minors"            3. "Lyrics of Lowly Life"            4. "Lyrics of the Hearthside"            5. "Sympathy" III. Short story writer       A. Folks from Dixie (1898)       B. The Strength of Gideon and Other Stories (1900)       C. The Heart of Happy Hollow (1904) IV. Novelist       A. The Uncalled (1898)       B. The Love of Landry (1900)       C. The Fanatics (1901)       D. The Sport of the Gods (1902) V. Conclusion           Paul Laurence Dunbar attended grade schools and Central High School in  Dayton, Ohio. He was editor of the High School Times and president of  Philomathean Literary Society in his senior year. Despite Dunbar's growing  reputation in the then small town of Dayton, writing jobs were closed to black  applicants and the money to further his education was scarce. In 1891, Dunbar  graduated from Central High School and was unable to find a decent job.  Desperate for employment, he settled for a job as an elevator operator in the  Callahan Building in Dayton.       The major accomplishments of Paul Laurence Dunbar's life during 1872 to  1938 labeled him as an American poet. Dunbar had two poetic identities. He was  first a Victorian poet writing in a comparatively formal style of literary  English. Dunbar's other identity was that of the dialect poet, writing lighter,  usually humorous or sentimental work not merely in the Negro dialect but in  other varieties as well: Irish, once in German, but very frequently in the  hoosier dialect of Indiana. There is good reason to assert, however, that the  sources of Dunbar's dialect verse were in the real language of the people. The  basic charge of this criticism can be stated in the words of a recent critic,  Jean Wagner. Dunbar's dialect is, he says, "at best a secondhand instrument,  irredeemably blemished by the degrading things imposed upon it by the enemies of  the Black people" (Revell, Paul Laurence Dunbar, pg. 84). One of the most  popular of Dunbar's dialect poems was and is "When Malindy Sings" which builds  upon the natural ability of the race in song and is acknowledged to be Dunbar's  tribute to his mother's spontaneous outbursts of singing as she worked in the  kitchen. The message of the poem is of praise for simplicity of spirit and the  love of God.       Another of Dunbar's superb poems is entitled "Sympathy", written in  1895:    I know what the caged bird feels,  alas!  When the sun is bright on the  upland slopes;  When the wind stirs soft through    					    
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