Langston Hughes: Voice of the Working-Class African Americans

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Hopes and Dreams Langston Hughes was an African American poet, essayist, playwright, and skilled short story wordsmith. He is best known for vocalizing the concerns of his fellow working-class African Americans. Hughes was born in 1902 in Joplin, Missouri, a descendant of prominent abolitionists and rose quickly to prominence during the “Harlem Renaissance”. We know Hughes for his extreme versatility and as a productive author who was particularly well known and loved for his folksy humor. Langston Hughes incorporate commodities in his tone, diction and imagery to enhance the readers experience in understanding the struggles of the African-American man. These poems filled …show more content…

Hughes speaks of “ancient,” dusky rivers,” and how deep his soul grows like the rivers. Black people built the pyramids, and slaves were working in the fields near the Mississippi River. The speaker uses his voice to speak for all African Americans, through their lineage of heritage. He talks about hearing the songs of the Mississippi relating back to his heritage of Africa. The speaker reflects back to Abe Lincoln visiting New Orleans, and he tells of seeing the muddy bosom. The words muddy might be a color imagery connecting with the sunset shining on the people and making them beautiful. Hughes poem shows a tie to the poem “I Too.” Both poems, Hughes talks describes to the audience how African America as their white brothers, because they worked the land with their hands, building and working the land near the Euphrates, which is an ancient Mesopotamian river. This simple and factual poem describes the history of the black Americans by looking back to the very beginning of the birth of humanity. As we look at the poem, “My People,” the imagery reflects back to the poems “I Too” and “The Negro Speaks of Rivers.” All three poems reflect on the renaissance of the African American people and of their struggles, hopes, and dreams. The

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