In Brent Staples’ review, “The Movie: Get Out Is a Strong Antidote to the Myth of “Postracial” America”, he argues that the film is a disquisition on the continuing impact of slavery in American life..
ESSAY PROMPTS
In Brent Staples’ review, “The Movie: Get Out Is a Strong Antidote to the Myth of “Postracial” America”, he argues that the film is a disquisition on the continuing impact of slavery in American life.. Instructions: The prompts listed below relate to the essays written by Brent Staples, Zadie Smith, and Carvell Wallace. You are to select ONE of the prompts of which to write a five-paragraph literary analysis essay.
The Movie: Get Out Is a Strong Antidote to the Myth of “Postracial” America
- In Brent Staples’ review, “The Movie: Get Out Is a Strong Antidote to the Myth of “Postracial” America”, he argues that the film is a disquisition on the continuing impact of slavery in American life.
Write an essay that analyzes how he came to this conclusion and the
way in which this is reflected in the movie, Get Out. Support your
analysis with key examples from the text and the film. - In Zadie Smith’s essay,” Getting In and Out: Who Owns Black Pain”, she
references the movie, Get Out, the casket photograph of Emmitt Till, and a poem by Langston Hughes.
Write an essay that analyzes pain experienced by black people as
reflected in each of these works. Support your analysis with key
examples from the text and the film, Get Out. - In Carvell Wallace’s essay, “Why Black Panther is a Defining Moment for Black America”, he claims that Black Panther “is steeped very specifically and purposefully in its blackness.”
Write an essay that analyzes the notion that Wakanda functions as a
place for multiple generations of Black Americans to store some of
our most deeply held aspirations. Support your analysis with key
examples from the text and film. - The characters in the film “Black Panther” and the essay by Carvell Wallace, reflect an Afrofuturistic society.
Write an essay that analyzes the purpose Afrofuturism serves for
Black society today. Support your analysis with examples from the
essay and film.
In Brent Staples’ review, “The Movie: Get Out Is a Strong Antidote to the Myth of “Postracial” America”, he argues that the film is a disquisition on the continuing impact of slavery in American life.