The early work and the later w
Langston Hughes devoted is art to true expression of the lives, hopes, fears, and angers of ordinary black people, without self-consciousness or sugar coating. Hughes became one of the foremost interpreters of racial relationships in the United States. Hughes emphasized the importance of African culture and believed that renewal could only come from an understanding of African roots. Hughes was born in Joplin, Missouri in 1902, but lived with his grandmother in Lawrence, Kansas until he was thirteen. Langston's father left home shortly after he was born. His grandmother's first husband was killed while fighting against slavery at an armory at Harpers Ferry. From these childhood memories came the strong African American pride that later flowed through all of Langston Hughes's writing. (F. Leon Wilson. "Mapping cyberspace in full colour.")Langston Hughes wrote of Harlem, under the Jim Crow laws, the plight of African Americans, and the beauty and strength of his race. He wrote to protest social injustice, and he wrote to educate and entertain. He wrote for all people. In the early poems, it is a hard and bitter tone because of their live. The poems are attempt to describe and document the Negro life, and create a bridge between Ne
The poem gave them ideas on how to handle situations that they found themselves in. It mainly talks about the live of being an African American. "To probe in polite way,"(Dinner Guest: Me, 1965) although the guest was being questioned politely about his background, which was not like theirs, he was able to find good in an oppressive situation. In "Mother to Son" and "I, Too", both poems mainly describe the blacks' life in America. In the last part,"Or does it just explode?"(Harlem 1053) It means if someone wants to try to change something, will the dream just backfire and blow up. "And sometimes goin' in the dark" (Mother to Son, 1041) shows their courage and faith. In the "Harlem" which was written in 1951, the later work form Hughes, is written about how his dreams of no more segregation and racism are vanishing. The tone of this poem is negative and the positive idea of black being equalized as white disappeared. " In this part, he said the black people will be equaled as white. In this poem, Hughes starts to think his dream of changing America and stopping the segregation and racism will never happens. "So boy, don't you turn back" (Mother to Son, 1041) is truing to tell us the Negro American didn't run away from life and didn't give up.
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