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This article has been monkeyized! [[User:Linux using monkey|Linux using monkey]] 00:00, 13 Nov 2004 (UTC) |
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[[Image:Hughes.jpg|thumb|Langston Hughes, photographed by [[Carl Van Vechten]], 1936]] |
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'''Langston Hughes''' ([[February 1]], [[1902]], - [[May 22]], [[1967]]) was an [[African American]] [[poet]], [[novel]]ist, [[playwright]], and newspaper columnist. He was born in [[Joplin, Missouri]]. He was raised by his grandmother, and when he was thirteen years old he began to write poetry. |
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[[Image:Monkey batu.jpg]] |
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Hughes's grandmother influenced his life and imagination deeply. She took him to Oswatomie where she shared the platform as an honored guest of [[Theodore Roosevelt|Teddy Roosevelt]]. (She was the last surviving widow of the [[1859]] [[John Brown (abolitionist)|John Brown]] raid.) |
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Hughes's early life prepared him well to write about humanity, for as a child and young man he lived in many places and met many different kinds of people. His growing-up years were, altogether, not very happy, but they provided him with experiences that many people never have. It was in [[Lincoln, Illinois]] where he stayed with his mother (who had remarried a man named Homer Clark) that he discovered books. Upon his graduation in 1919, Hughes spent a year in [[Mexico]] with his father. This made him severely unhappy. Most of the time Langston, depressed, contemplated suicide. |
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After this, he spent a year attending [[Columbia University]]. |
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Like many creative Americans at the time, such as [[Ernest Hemingway]] and [[Gertrude Stein]], Langston Hughes spent time in [[Paris, France]]. During the height of the great gathering of minds in [[Montparnasse]], for most of [[1924]], he lived at 15, Rue de Nollet. |
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In November 1924 he moved to [[Washington D.C.]] Hughes's first book of poetry, ''The Weary Blues'' was published in [[1926]]. In 1929 he graduated from [[Lincoln University]] in [[Pennsylvania]]. In 1930, his first novel ''Not Without Laughter'' won the Harmon gold medal for literature. Hughes, who claimed [[Paul Lawrence Dunbar]], [[Carl Sandburg]], and [[Walt Whitman]] as his primary influences, is particularly known for his insightful, colorful portrayals of black life in America from the twenties through the sixties. |
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He wrote [[novel]]s, [[short story|short stories]] and [[play]]s, as well as [[poetry]], and is also known for his engagement with the world of [[jazz]] and the influence it had on his writing, as in "Montage of a Dream Deferred", from which a line was taken for the title of the play ''[[Raisin in the Sun]]''. |
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: |
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::What happens to a dream deferred? |
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::Does it dry up |
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::like a raisin in the sun? |
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::Or fester like a sore- |
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::And then run? |
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::Does it stink like rotten meat? |
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::Or crust and sugar over- |
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::like a syrupy sweet? |
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::Maybe it just sags |
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::like a heavy load. |
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::Or does it explode? |
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: |
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His life and work were enormously important in shaping the artistic contribution of the [[Harlem Renaissance]] of the [[1920s]]. Langston Hughes's art reflects this deep understanding of black people. But it also expresses the love for them. He wanted to tell the stories of his people in ways that reflected their actual culture, including both their suffering and their love of music, laughter, and language itself. |
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Much of Langston’s poetry tries to capture the rhythms of [[blues]] music, the music he believed to be the true expression of the black spirit. His published works through 1965 include nine volumes of poetry, eight of short stories and sketches, two novels, seven [[Children's literature|children's books]], a number of plays, essays, and translations, and a two-volume [[autobiography]]. Hughes was inducted into the [[National Institute of Arts and Letters]] in 1961. |
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Hughes, like many black writers and artists of his time, was drawn to the promise of socialism as an alternative to a segregated America. He travelled to the [[Soviet Union]] to participate in the making of a movie which was never filmed and travelled extensively in Central Asia in parts of the USSR which were typically forbidden to Westerners. Hughes's poetry was frequently published in the [[CPUSA]]’s newspaper and was involved in initiatives supported by communist organizations, such as the drive to free the [[Scottsboro Boys]] and support of the [[Spanish Republic]]. While involved in some socialist and communist organizations in the US like the [[John Reed Clubs]] and the [[League of Struggle for Negro Rights]], he was more of a sympathizer than an active participant. His public support of the [[Soviet Union]] was demonstrated by his signing a statement in [[1938]] supporting [[Joseph Stalin]]’s [[purges]]. |
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He was accused of being a [[communist]] by many on the right, but he always denied this and when asked why he never joined the Communist Party, he wrote "it was based on strict discipline and the acceptance of directives that I, as a writer, did not wish to accept." He was called before [[HUAC]] in [[1953]] and following his appearance, he distanced himself from socialism and was rebuked for this by some on the left. |
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Langston Hughes died of complications from [[prostate cancer]] in [[New York City]]. |
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==Hughes poem used as Kerry campaign slogan== |
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Presidential candidate [[John Kerry]] selected the title of a [[1938]] poem by Hughes, "[[Let America be America again]]" as the slogan for his [[ John Kerry presidential campaign, 2004|2004 Presidential campaign]]. Kerry said: |
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<blockquote> |
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"Langston Hughes was a poet, a black man and a poor man. And he wrote in the 1930s powerful words that apply to all of us today. He said 'Let America be America again. Let it be the dream that it used to be for those whose sweat and blood, whose faith and pain, for those whose hand at the foundry - something Pittsburgh knows about - for those whose plough in the rain must bring back our mighty dream again.' " |
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</blockquote> |
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Republican opponents cited Hughes's radical communist and socialist past in attacks on Kerry. |
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The poem contrasts American idealism with the reality for black people at that time: |
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::Let America be America again.<br> |
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::Let it be the dream it used to be. |
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::Let it be the pioneer on the plain |
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::Seeking a home where he himself is free. |
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::(America never was America to me.) |
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==Quotations from other poems== |
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:::'''Motto''' |
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::I stay cool, and dig all jive, |
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::That's the way I stay alive. |
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::My motto, as I live and learn, is |
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::Dig and be dug, in return. |
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:::'''Cross''' |
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::My old man's a white old man |
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::And my old mother's black. |
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::If ever I cursed my white old man |
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::I take my curses back. |
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::If ever I cursed my black old mother |
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::And wished she were in hell, |
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::I'm sorry for that evil wish |
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::And now I wish her well. |
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::My old man died in a fine big house. |
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::My ma died in a shack. |
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::I wonder where I'm gonna die, |
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::Being neither white nor black........ |
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==External links== |
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*[http://www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?45442B7C000C0E01 Academy of American Poets] |
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*[http://eir.library.utoronto.ca/rpo/display/poet172.html Representative Poetry Online, University of Toronto] |
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*[http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/fvdveer/p-hughes.htm Montage of a Dream Deferred] |
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[[Category:1902 births|Hughes, Langston]] |
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[[Category:1967 deaths|Hughes, Langston]] |
Revision as of 00:00, 13 November 2004
This article has been monkeyized! Linux using monkey 00:00, 13 Nov 2004 (UTC)