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Discrimination In America By Allen Ginsberg's 'America'

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The United States of America have long been known as the Land of the Free and the home of the American Dream. From a small colony seeking freedom to the world’s melting pot, America has been a welcoming home to many reformers and innovators and visionaries and common people looking for a place to turn their dream into reality. This romantic notion has historically defined America, but it is not the truth. America’s truth is slavery and bloodshed and death and poverty caused by confusion and hatred and bigotry and pride. Since it’s birth, the only winners, the few to live the Dream, have been straight males with ancestry from western Europe. Everyone else has faced hatred and crime and sorrow, for nothing. And after centuries of this pattern of disrespect, self-fulfilling prophecies have arisen, and hate has bred hate. In his poem, “America,” Allen Ginsberg discusses the effects of long-term discrimination and prejudice against minority groups in America through the contrast of nonsensical circumlocutions and more concise glimpses of reality. The first of two major groups that Ginsberg writes of are immigrants and other racial minorities. The poem begins with the line “America I’ve given you all and now I’m nothing” (Ginsberg 39). This is a very straightforward start to a crazy poem. Ginsberg begins by telling everyone exactly what he thinks, and the rest of the poem supports this sentiment through tangents and circumlocution. This line refers to the American Dream, the

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