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compose a response of about 200 words in length., MLA Successful responses will reference the text(s) / materials in question via direct quotes and paraphrases. Please submit this response in PDF format. All papers will be reviewed by Turnitin Plagiarism Framework. Proper citation in essential. Students must cite both direct quotes and paraphrased ideas. Even casual browsing of the Internet without proper referencing can result in plagiarism. According to his biography on poetryfoudation.org, “The son of peasant farmers, McKay was infused with pride in his African heritage. His early literary interests, though, were in English poetry. Under the tutelage of his brother, schoolteacher Uriah Theophilus McKay, and a neighboring Englishman, Walter Jekyll, McKay studied the British masters—including John Milton, Alexander Pope, and the later Romantics-and European philosophers such as eminent pessimist Arthur Schopenhauer, whose works Jekyll was then translating from German into English. It was Jekyll who advised aspiring poet McKay to write verse in Jamaican dialect.” Most notably, in works such as "If We Must Die" and "America," McKay uses the "traditional”, “English”, and dare we say "WHITE" poetic form of the Shakespearean Sonnet to address conflicts and challenges present within the African-American population. Here is a link to an essay by critic Jenna Casciano that explores the aforementioned paradox: https://scalar.lehigh.edu/mckay/claude-mckay-and-the-sonnet-form In your response of at least 200 words, please look at a few of McKay's poems and suggest some possible reasons why he chose to use more “established” rather than “experimental" forms. Cite any and all sources (including Casciano).