In an unforgettable novel by American writer Charles W. Chesnut, we started studying and understanding the plight of a privileged woman in the early 20th century. . The main character, Rena Walden, has the opportunity to enter the noble white society which is honored with great expectations for identity, luxury, and wonderful marriage. However, in order to cross the line of color well, she must leave behind a racial past behind her. Reina 's dilemma is that she wants to belong to two very different worlds simultaneously, but she can not be in such a deep and isolated society.
Michelle adapted the two works by Charles W. Chesnutt and made their original version: The Conjure Woman (1926) and The House Behind the Cedars (1927). The latter addressed the problem of mixed-blood and overtaking, and when the Virginia Film Commission reviewed it, he was forced to cut to show it and caused such a big controversy. In 1932 he recreated the story into a healthy movie and announced it under the heading "Veiled Aristocrats". The silent version of this movie is considered to have been lost.
Some of the most outspoken criticisms on the reasons for the failure of the alliance came from African Americans before the southern writers, including Charles W. Chesnut who wrote the novel in the First World War, 1900. "Cedar House" The traditional bone marrow of the following year. However, African-American writers are not considered part of the southern literary tradition, but white men are male writers who mainly consider themselves as authors and guardians. Given the outstanding performance of other famous African-American writers from the South, this is a fairly obvious omission like the author of the famous novel "Traditional Son" in 1940, Richard Wright, Mississippi.
A woman. In 1900, Chesnutt published the second volume of short stories "The Wife of Youth" and "Other Stories of the Color Series". This is a story about the racial prejudice of black African Americans. Chesnutt 's short stories, especially The Conjure Woman' s novels, are praised by critics about their innovative structure and the combination of realism and fantasy. Chesnutt depicts the physical and psychological difficulties that African Americans suffer using African-American traditions and dialects, as Jules McAdoo showed overwhelming suffering in "The Goophered Grapevine" I will. It shows extraordinary power and creativity to protect their lives and their communities. His grown literary achievement has made him abandon his shorthand business he founded in 1890 and concentrate on writing. In 1900, he published his first novel "House behind Cedar"