Zusammenfassung der Ressource
James Mercer
Langston Hughes
- Who?
- He was an Afro-American poet novelist,and playwright
- He attended Columbia University,but
left after one year to travel
- When?
- He died on May of 1967
- He was born on February of 1902,in Joplin, Missouri.
- He published his first book in 1926
- What?
- In 1925 Hughes' poem "The Weary
Blues" won first prize in the
Opportunity magazine literary
competition, and Hughes also
received a scholarship to attend
Lincoln University, in Pennsylvania
- The inscription marking the spot
features a line from Hughes'
poem "The Negro speaks of
Rivers". It reads: "My soul has
grown deep like the rivers"
- He wrote a lot of poems
- He expressed the
suffering and the
struggle of his poem for
equal rights
- He wrote "I, too,sing
America"
- Here, the speaker is sent to the kitchen so that the
family,the white Americans, is not embarassed by him
when company comes. We can compare them to the
representatives of other States
- The poem seems to be saying that the speaker is like the "black
sheep" of the family at the time when African-American lived in
poverty and were beaten and abused by white Americans
- The closing lines conclude the message of the poem with a sense
of hope: the people will see that he is really beautiful and they
will be ashamed by their previous behavior
- He states he also has the right to sing as an
American,because he,too, is American!