The Life and Achievements of Famous Poet, Langston Hughes

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I Am Negro, Black as Night

The title of this paper was inspired by the famous black poet, Langston Hughes’, poem Negro, which is included in the book The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes’ works are world renowned classics years after the start of his career. Hughes’ works were very influential in the age of the Harlem Renaissance. They are some of the greatest and most eye-opening works of that time. The research undertaken in this paper will include some aspects of his personal life, educational background, important works, the difference in his writing styles and the achievements that he acquired during his career.

Langston Hughes was born James Mercer Langston Hughes on February 1, 1902 in Joplin, Missouri. His parents divorced at a young age and for some time he was raised by his grandmother in Lawrence, Kansas (Kansas Heritage.com). After the divorce, his father moved to Mexico and Langston went to live with his mother and her new family in Lincoln, Illinois when he was thirteen. Around this time is when Hughes began writing his poetic works. Langston’s father had trouble finding work in America because of his race, so he relocated to Mexico. When his father moved away, Hughes found that writing poetry helped him to express his feelings about his father relocation. After living in Illinois for only a year, the family moved to Cleveland, Ohio where Hughes’ stepfather found work.

In Hughes’ junior year of high school, he moved to Mexico to live with his father. Langston Hughes returned to Cleveland to finish high school, graduated and attended Columbia University (poets.org). Some jobs Langston acquired during the years after he left Columbia in 1922 were as a busboy, assistant cook, lau...

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...ne Hansberry, where the title is taken from a line in Hughes’ poem, A Dream Deferred (filmreference.com).

The most recognizable achievement of Langston Hughes’ career was his “enlightening and intriguing portrayals of black life in America during the 1920s-1960s” (poets.org). Mr. Hughes’ writings are one of the best methods to inform society of the times of the Harlem Renaissance. Langston Hughes was known as the Poet Laureate of Harlem, which describes him as one of the most well-known poets to grace Harlem’s street corners.

Though Hughes died on May 22, 1967 in Harlem of complications from prostate cancer, his works live on in infamy. His works are studied by students worldwide and still constantly sell out. As previously stated, Langston Hughes is known as one of the greatest African-American writers to ever introduce his prose to American society.

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