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  1. Summary. The vignettes and stories in Part 1 take place in a rural community in the southern state of Georgia. "Karintha" is a vignette, or brief description narrated in the third-person past tense. The vignette combines prose and lyrics from an African American folk song. "Karintha" begins and ends with a folk song stanza describing a woman ...

  2. Cane Summary and Analysis of “Karintha” to “Evening Song”. Summary. Karintha (prose) Men always desired Karintha, even when she was a small child. She was a whirl of energy and mischief, a wild flash. Rumors were spread even when she was young. Houses in Georgia were two rooms: in one you cooked and ate, in the other you slept and made ...

    • Jean Toomer
  3. Part. Summary. Part 1, Karintha. The vignettes and stories in Part 1 take place in a rural community in the southern state of Georgia. "Karintha" i... Read More. Part 1, Poems (Reapers–Song of the Son) The poems in Part 1 borrow from folk songs, spirituals, and imagist techniques. "Reapers" is an eight-line poem ...

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  5. Karintha is a woman. She who carries beauty, perfect as dusk when the sun goes down. She has been married many times. Old men remind her that a few years back they rode her hobby-horse upon their knees. Karintha smiles, and indulges them when she is in the mood for it. She has contempt for them.

  6. Cane Summary. Cane is notoriously difficult to summarize because it is not exactly a novel; rather, it is a collection of short prose pieces, poems, and a longer short-story/drama hybrid. However, there are a few ways to look at the overarching work, especially as it comes in three parts. Part I is set in the South (Georgia, specifically).

    • Jean Toomer
  7. Imagery: The Show ("Box Seat") The penultimate scene of the story is a grinning, grotesque dwarf threateningly offering Muriel a bloody rose that she is forced to take. The disturbing scene is a powerful image of the artifice and thinly-veiled violence of the North. Muriel, a black woman, is under the scrutiny of the dwarf and the community at ...

  8. Cane, Jean Toomer’s most famous book, was first published in 1923. The original publication of the novel was a foundational moment in the Harlem Renaissance literary movement. Cane’s reissue (after being out of print for many years) in 1967 came out during the Second Renaissance of African American literature. This guide cites the 2019 ...