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Issues in Contemporary Literature : Black English as Identity
Bok av Patricia Alvarez Sanchez
Literature Review from the year 1999 in the subject American Studies - Literature, grade: 1, State University of New York at Stony Brook, course: Contemporary Issues in Literature, language: English, abstract: Language is one very special way we have to communicate with other
human beings. It unites members of similar cultures who learn to share through
the same experiences and to see the world through the same vocabulary. There
are at least as many cultures as languages in the world. As Wilhelm von Humboldt
mentioned "The variety of languages is not merely a variety of sounds and signs,
but in fact a variety of world views." Undoubtedly, languages are a unifying
element that brings identity and uniqueness to every human being because they
tell the rest of the world, where we come from, where we have lived and who we
are.
This paper deals with Black English, also called African American English or
Ebonics, as an African American linguistic variety of American English and the
way it is reflected in the novel Push (1997) by Sapphire. It discusses Black English
as a way to express and define black identity and their unique culture. There is a
parallelism in the oppression of a language and the culture it represents, as we
can clearly appreciate in the case of Black English. While Ebonics has been
oppressed by the predominant Standard English, blacks were violently silenced by
"standard" North Americans. It was not until recently that Ebonics uniqueness
has been interpreted neither as a mispronunciation of English, nor as a series of
grammatical mistakes due to ignorance or lack of education. Unfortunately, both
blacks language and their culture have suffered from manipulation and have
been bent to fit the needs of the dominant class.
Sappharis Push (1997) is a novel that combines pure poetry and brutal
honesty and was also the first novel completely written in Ebonics. As such, it
arose an important controversy due to its novelty and harsh themes. It tells the
sto