The Life & Poems of Langston Hughes

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During a time in American History were African Americans had no rights of freedom of speech or even a right to vote. Growing up in many different cities and living with many relatives, Langston Hughes experienced poverty. Langston Hughes used poetry to speak to the people. Langston Hughes is a pioneer of African American literature and the Harlem renaissance error. Mr. Hughes dedicated his poems to the struggles, pride, dreams, and racial injustices of African American people.

Langston Hughes was born James Langston Hughes, February 1, 1902 in Joplin, Missouri. Langston Hughes, named after his grandfather James Mercer Langston, was the first African American elected to public office in 1855. Langston Hughes, mother and father soon divorced when he was still a young child. Mr. Hughes father moved to Mexico, as Langston and his mother moved frequently staying with relatives. Mr. Hughes finally stayed with his grandmother until his mother re-married in 1915. Once, Langston Hughes mother re-married he moved to Lincoln, Illinois and then to Cleveland, Ohio were attended Central High school. During the time in high school, Langston started to write poetry and short literary stories in the schools magazine (Hughes). After graduating from high school in June 1920, Langston Hughes spent time with his father in Mexico and teaching English. During the time, Langston Hughes spent with his father he started writing for the Crisis magazine, in which published by the NAACP. The NAACP played an influential part in the civil rights movement this allowed Langston to send poetry and literature regularly to the Crisis magazine. Langston Hughes left Mexico to pursue school in Columbia University, while in school he continued to submit...

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...ngston Hughes wrote about the Great Depression; how it affected the black community severely. During the Great Depression white Americans and Black American lost money and their jobs. Langston Hughes wrote about the poor and homeless Black Americans. “During the rise of the Civil Rights struggle, his publications in the 1950s and 1960s spoke on the political upheaval and the conditions of African American Life (Hughes).” This affected the dreams African Americans had for equality. Only thing people had were their dreams, this lead Langston Hughes writing the poem Dream Deferred. Dream Deferred represent the hardship that every American was going through, fighting through poverty and financial heartache. Black Americans and White Americans loved his poems. Langston Hughes continued to fight for equality and political injustices until he died on May 22, 1967.

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