Democracy (Langston Hughes poem) Literary Elements

Democracy (Langston Hughes poem) Literary Elements

Speaker or Narrator, and Point of View

An unnamed African-American person who opines about the state of democracy in the United States for people of color. The narrator represents every African-American person in the country.

Form and Meter

Free verse.

Metaphors and Similes

The entire poem is a metaphor for the struggles African-American individuals experience as a result of institutional racism.

Alliteration and Assonance

N/A

Irony

There is an implied irony in the poem: African-Americans were ensured the same rights as everyone else. However, they weren't given those rights, something the poem's narrator is lamenting.

Genre

Lyric

Setting

The poem's setting is never specified, but it is presumably set in America during the Civil Rights Movement.

Tone

Assertive and determined.

Protagonist and Antagonist

The people fighting for democracy and equal rights (including the narrator) is the poem's protagonist. The people opposing them is the poem's antagonist.

Major Conflict

The fight for democracy and equal rights is the major conflict of the poem.

Climax

The poem doesn't have a climax. It is more meditative in nature.

Foreshadowing

The poem doesn't utilize a narrative structure; thus, foreshadowing doesn't play a role in the poem.

Understatement

The terrible effects institutional racism have had on black people in America is understated throughout the poem.

Allusions

There are allusions to the Civil Rights Movement and other U.S. history.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

"Freedom" is a metonym for the freedom black people desire (and deserve) in the United States.

Personification

Democracy itself is personified throughout the poem.

Hyperbole

The poem doesn't utilize hyperbole.

Onomatopoeia

The poem doesn't include any words that sound like they do in real life (e.g. "oink").

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