In 1928, "How did you dye it" is written. Zola grew up in a black town and began to notice the difference between black and white. The only white man she was exposed to passed Eatonville, Florida, many times, only those who came from Orlando. The main focus of "How I feel my color" is the relationship between black and white and the difference between white and white. At the beginning of Zora's life, at the beginning of "How do I feel the color", the eyes of black and white are almost the same.
Zola Neil Hirston's "How to feel my color" can be interpreted as a reverse reaction of the concept of "double consciousness" by WEB DuBois, which he mentioned in "The Soul of the Black Man". Americans experienced a sense of dual consciousness and some people planted the confidence needed to accept the "darkness" of a person. First of all, it may be useful to define consciousness before attempting to explain the concept of dual consciousness. - Use written orphaned themes to shape key characters and provide a concrete perspective on certain important aspects of their identity. A writer like Nancy Mears, "About frustration", Zola Neil Hurston, "How do you make you feel the color", and Sherman Alexie, "The joy of reading and writing: Superman and me" theme
James Baldwin's "The Strangers of the Village" and Zoraniel Hullson's "How Color Feel My Colors" is a story for everyone and past experiences made them today's people. James Baldwin's "The Strangers of the Village" and Zoraniel Heston's "How to Feel My Color" have a contradictory view, which has had a major impact on how they later became individuals. - "How do you dye?" Was written in 1928. Zola grew up in a black town and began to notice the difference between black and white. The only white man she was exposed to passed Eatonville, Florida, many times, only those who came from Orlando. The main focus of "How I feel my color" is the relationship between black and white and the difference between white and white.
This guide is based on electronic version of "How to Me Feel Make Feel" by Zora Neale Hurston which is posted on the University of Virginia Mules and Men website. The original paper was published as "World Tomorrow" in May, 1928. Heston's article is her explanation on how to experience African-Americans. Heston opened an article and commented that she is a "black man", unlike many African Americans who did not claim native American blood. Before the age of 13, he lived in a black town in Eatonville, Florida. There, the southern and northern tourists passed through the town was the only connection with blacks. Everyone is not interested in familiar South people, but most people are very fascinated by the Northern People as they see them from their pouches.