Notes from the Inkpot
Writing, teaching, creating - one ink-stained idea at a time.
The White House by Claude McKay: Analysis of Racism, Exclusion and Resistance
Claude McKay's The White House is a powerful sonnet that explores racism, exclusion, dignity, and resistance. Through the symbolic image of a closed door, McKay examines the emotional and psychological impact of prejudice while celebrating the courage required to maintain self-respect in the face of discrimination. The poem's tension between anger and restraint transforms a personal experience of rejection into a wider reflection on power, identity, and moral integrity. This analysis explores the poem's symbolism, sonnet form, key quotes, themes, line-by-line analysis, alternative interpretations, anthology comparisons, and exam-focused insights. Ideal for students and teachers studying Cambridge International AS & A Level Literature in English (9695), it provides detailed commentary on how McKay presents exclusion, resilience, and the determination to resist hatred without surrendering one's humanity.