Political Views In Langston Hughes's Song For A Dark Girl

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Hughes’ political views can be outlined in “Song for a Dark Girl.” The female speaker recounts her experience with her lover being lynched. Rather than going into depth about her feelings of despair, the speaker is distant. This refers to how common this practice was after the civil war. “Song for a Dark Girl” also showcases how African Americans aren’t given the ability to mourn, this is expressed in her description of love as a “Naked shadow” (“Song for a Dark Girl”, 11). The reader can interpret the line, “I asked the white lord Jesus / What was the use of prayer” as an indication of the speaker admitting defeat (“Song for a Dark Girl, 7-8). The speaker’s use of “White lord Jesus” alludes to the control Caucasians had over African Americans
Despite a man’s corpse hanging from a tree, the allusion to a minstrel song used to rally for the postbellum south, was more sympathetic to a population that is unaffected by lynching. Hughes’ poem “Silhouette” has an ambiguous speaker; given the subject matter and his other applications of poetics, the speaker could be the voice of the middle class African American. His poem is suggesting that crimes against African Americans are demoralized by those who feel that they are no longer affected by it.
Another facet of Hughes’ poetics is not only teaching his audience how the modern African American should act, but illustrating the destructive effects of constant self-hatred and negativity. Demonstrating the correlation between consistent exposures to discrimination and becoming the stereotype emphasizes how harmful stereotypes can be. Hughes’ poem, “Bad Man,” is an example of this. The speaker describes himself as, “I’m a bad, bad man / Cause everybody tells me so” to point out that reinforcement is powerful (“Bad Man, 1-2). Hearing about a specific sediment over and over causes someone to believe in
/ He slept like a rock or a man that’s dead” (“The Weary Blues,” 34-35). The final line symbolizes the speaker’s emotional connection to the blues singer. This also functions as a parallel to “I ain’t happy no mo’ / And I wish that I had died,” comparatively, the speaker was able to sympathize with the blues singer’s pain. The blues singer’s lyrics directly reflects Hughes’ position on blues and jazz and the modern African American artist. The idea that African Americans aren’t given the same freedom is expressed with the singer’s lyrics, “Ain’t got nobody but ma self. / I’s gwine to quit ma frownin’ / And put ma troubles on the shelf” (“The Weary Blues”, 20-22). Hughes is conveying that the African American artist has to prioritize everyone’s feelings before their own. Jazz music which is thoroughly ingrained in most of Hughes’ poems, heightens the poem’s overall

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