"White Burden" The movie we saw in classes was called "Caucasian burden". According to some sociologists, the burden of Caucasian is an unnecessary burden, whites of the upper class of society must bring ethnicities to their position. For example, if it is applied today, Caucasians must help blacks move to higher levels. This theory was used many years ago, but we are still under consideration today. The movie uses a very unique approach. It separates two kinds of people, white and black.
As an alternative to Dark Heart, Rudyard Kipling's poem "The White Man's Burden" (Click on "some poems" and then "white people's burden.") The poet is short of colonial literature It is an important example. Please note that Kipling is writing articles about India more than African countries, but both are examples of colonial relations with the British Empire of the 19th century. Please ask the students the following questions about this verse. What is "white burden" of "poet"? How does this verse depict a non whites? What is the attitude of the narrator to the empire and colonialism? How is this attitude different from the narrator of "separation of things"? What do Europeans think about Africans and what do Africans think about faux white people?
In February 1899, a British novelist and poet Rudyad Kipling wrote a poem titled "Caucasian Burden: America and the Philippine Archipelago". In this poem, Kipling urged the United States to bear the "burden" of the empire, as the UK did. And other European countries. Theodore Roosevelt soon became the vice president and became the president, "explains that although it is a rather bad poetry, it is meaningful from the perspective of expansion." People are deeply impressed. In many imitations of the "white burden" at the time, labor editor George McNeil announced satirical "burden of the poor" in March,