The Cross and the Lynching Tree Literary Elements

The Cross and the Lynching Tree Literary Elements

Genre

Theological text

Setting and Context

America in the 20th Century

Narrator and Point of View

The narrator is James H. Cone himself, who offers an insight into the African American point of view.

Tone and Mood

The tone of the mood is often melancholy and contemplative.

Protagonist and Antagonist

There is no clear protagonist, but the text does offer the perspective of African Americans. The antagonist is racism.

Major Conflict

The major conflict in this text is the suffering that African Americans have endured throughout history and the fact that this suffering is still not acknowledged fully today due to shame, embarrassment, and ignorance.

Climax

In Chapter 5, Cone describes the lynching of a pregnant black woman. This horrific description could be considered a climax in the text due to its shocking nature.

Foreshadowing

The death of Jesus on the cross symbolically foreshadows the deaths of many African American men and women as a result of lynching.

Understatement

Cone argues that in theological discourse, the connection between the cross and the lynching tree is understated.

Allusions

Cone alludes to "Strange Fruit," a haunting jazz song about lynching.

Imagery

Violent imagery is used to describe the lynching of black men and women in 20th Century America

Paradox

The cross is a "paradoxical symbol" according to Cone, as it suggests there is hope in death.

Parallelism

A parallel is created between the cross and the lynching tree in the text.

Metonymy and Synecdoche

N/A

Personification

N/A

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