E. B. Dubois's Darkwater: Voices Within The Veil

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Pastoralism and the rural ideal can be defined as an attraction for land and farming as a way of life. As a middle landscape, frequently represented in the symbols of the garden and the machine, the pastoral is amid nature and civilization. The pastoral ideal is borrowed from the literary tradition of the pastoral, with its images of sylvan meadows and the rural life as havens from the dangers of the world. The rural ideal represents which visualize the country-side as a source of life, peace, innocence and simple virtue, a refugee from the modern world. Pastoralism is a cultural substitute to the idea of the city as a place of noise, corruption and hostility. Diverse stages of pastoralism have been acknowledged as pragmatic versus romantic, but its eternal power lies in its conceptual malleability. …show more content…

The ideal of pastoralism have had a pervasive influence on American politics, society and culture. The rural ideal despite the border historical narrative of America’s urban and industrial modernization, continue to …show more content…

For W. E. B. DuBois, encounters with nature revealed the deep ambivalence that existed for the Black community regarding nature: to escape nature indicated progress, one step past the land labor of the slave era. But DuBois’s Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil documented that the nature that people sought to escape also held within it a healing balm for the subjugation that weighed so heavy. The concurrent draw toward and repulsion from nature is evident in his narratives: the dual nature of nature, a place to be feared, and a place to go and stand in

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