Phillis Weatley, born in West Africa, was known to be the first published African-American female poet. She was sold as a slave by the age of seven or eight and brought to North America. She was lucky to be bought by the Wheatley family in Boston. She was taught how to read and write. They encouraged her to learn the art of poetry upon noticing her potentials in the world of literature. In her poems, she wrote her life as a slave. Critics claimed that she was reluctant when writing poems about slavery. She wrote poems praising slavery since it brought her to Christianity. On the other hand, she said in her other poems that slavery was a cruel fate.
Henry Louis Gates, Jr. was interested to speak about the life and trials of Phillis Wheatley since he wanted to be both a literary critic and a teacher at the same time. He has been an essential constituent to the Black Periodical Literature Project (a digital archive of black newspapers and magazines). The Life and Trials of Phillis Wheatkey (published last 2003) is part of the black culture and literature he is an advocate at.
1. Use many research sources and take notes 2. to interest the reader into reading further 3. to show readers you are using a direct quote 4. locate items in the works cited page
Answer:
write an essay on the most interesting parts of your life
The character that I would NOT describe as round is Lizabeth. Hope this helps!!
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Yes, that slogan is an oversimplification. People could misunderstand the real meaning of what they are trying to say.
That is precisely why slogans are powerful because they transmit one idea in few words. But these words have to be careful though of to make an everlasting impact. And that is the job f many creative people who work in political campaigns.
Yes, I can you think of any political slogans which have stuck in your mind. For instance, the recent campaign slogans of Joe Biden and Donald Trump.
Former President Trump's campaign slogan that stuck in my mind is "Make America Great." It was a good slogan. Short, powerful, with a deep meaning. It worked up to a degree. And as far as I'm concern, it is the name of an entire political movement he is leading.
Regarding Bidden's slogan, "Battle for the Soul of Our Nation," I think is corny. Not so real. It tried to inspire a metaphysical meaning that sounds poetic, not realistic.