The level of culture in African-American literature - the lifelong of Frederic Douglas, the song of Solomon, and the story promoting universal culture are released. Therefore, there are themes in various options that have been read so far. However, liberation is done in various ways as well as literacy. Every aspect of academic literacy is very obvious in liberation, especially when people are faced with members being excluded from mainstream culture. Among the stories of the various slaves we studied, everyone except one author, Mary Prince, was able to achieve academic literacy to varying degrees (Mary Prince is learning to read and write I did).
As an introduction to the normative tradition of African-American literature, this paper shows the importance of national tradition to black American culture and culture. It details general metaphors, themes and aesthetics that form the basis for shaping the differences and differences between African American literature and literary research. Studies of pan-African slave culture history formed by Africanism can not be eliminated by cultural pluralism. Traditions like noise provide evidence of national ethnic identity formed by common cultural values. Stuckey then associates these cultural values with nationalistic thinkers such as David Walker, W. E. B. Dubois and Paul Robinson
African-American literature: African American literature is a literary work written by African-American. African-American literary tradition: African-American literature, they have similar themes, metaphor and other long-term evolution. Black feminist literary criticism: A process by which scholars and critics theoretically explore, read, analyze and explore literary works as well as general works by black female writers or "texts". . The viewpoint of a black feminist / lens: the form of reading; requesting that the reader be a black man or woman nor requesting a black woman to be considered in the text. From the perspective of a black feminist, attention must be paid to race, class, gender and sexual oppression. Young adult literature: Non-'classical' or non 'classical' literature including the protagonists from 12 to 18