Summary
Allison Adelle Hedge Coke considers her poem “America, I Sing You Back” to be an extension of two famous poems about the identity of America: Walt Whitman’s
“I Hear America Singing”
and Langston Hughes’
“I, Too”
. Written as a response to those poems, Coke's poem considers America from the perspective of a woman and indigenous person.
Listen to the poem in the link below and
read along on the NewsHour site here
.
[embed]https://soundcloud.com/pbsnewshour/america-i-sing-you-back[/embed]
Five Facts
-
Who
wrote this poem and why did she do so, according to the linked article?
-
What
are some of the ways Coke celebrates the American experience or characterizes what it means to be American?
-
What
are some of the ways Coke critiques the American experience?
-
What
are some of the words and images that suggest the subjective perspective of a woman and indigenous person in the poem?
-
How
does Coke characterize the past, present and future of the American experience in this poem?
Focus Questions
Why do you think Coke wrote this poem, and what do you think she was trying to say about the relationship between the indigenous people of the Americas and the United States?
Media literacy:
What would you like more information about to better understand Coke's meaning and intentions?
For More
For more of Coke's work,
see this
.
Educators: To receive the Daily News Lesson in your inbox each morning, sign up
here
.