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Toomer, Jean 1894–1967: Critical Essay by Robert Bone

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About 2 pages (475 words)
Jean Toomer Summary

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The decisive factor in Toomer's life and art was his ambivalence toward his blackness…. ["Cane"] is in fact a poetic celebration of his black identity, all the more poignant for the complicated tensions with which the subject was surrounded….

Toomer's symbol for his blackness is the Southern cane…. Cane represents the sweetness of life. It is connected obviously with sex, with a fullness of emotion, with a sense of soil, of rootedness, of the pain and beauty of the Negro past. It is expressive, moreover, of a deep yearning for the rural South. To read "Cane" is to feel at once the strength of the Negro's Southern heritage. Down home is still the bloody shrine of the black man's heart.

This is a free excerpt of 119 words. There are 475 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Toomer, Jean 1894–1967: Critical Essay by Robert Bone from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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