Hughes,
Langston
(1902-1967), American writer, known for the use of jazz and black folk
rhythms in his poetry. James Mercer Langston Hughes was born in
Joplin, Missouri, and educated at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania.
He published his first poem, "The Negro Speaks of Rivers,"
in Crisis magazine in 1921 and studied at Columbia University
from 1921 to 1922. He then lived for a time in Paris. After his return
to the United States, he worked as a busboy in Washington, D.C. There,
in 1925, his literary skills were discovered after he left three of
his poems beside the plate of American poet Vachel Lindsay, who
recognized Hughes’s abilities and subsequently helped publicize
Hughes’s work.
Hughes
wrote in many genres, but he is best known for his poetry, in which he
disregarded classical forms in favor of musical rhythms and the oral and
improvisatory traditions of black culture. In the 1920s, when he lived in New
York City, he was a prominent figure during the Harlem Renaissance and was
referred to as the Poet Laureate of Harlem. His innovations in form and voice
influenced many black writers. Hughes also wrote the drama Mulatto
(1935), which was performed on Broadway 373 times. Beginning in the 1930s,
Hughes was active in social and political causes, using his poetry as a
vehicle for social protest. He traveled to the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR), Haiti, and Japan, and he served as the Madrid correspondent
for a Baltimore, Maryland, newspaper during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939).
In
the 1940s, first for the Chicago Defender and later for the New York
Post, Hughes wrote a newspaper column in the voice of the character Simple
(also called Jesse B. Semple), who expressed the thoughts of young black
Americans. Simple’s plain speech, humor, and use of dialect belied his
wisdom and common sense. The character became famous and later figured in many
of Hughes’s short stories.
Hughes
wrote more than 50 books. His works include the poetry volumes Weary Blues
(1926), The Dream Keeper (1932), Shakespeare in Harlem (1942),
and Fields of Wonder (1947) and the short-story collections The Ways
of White Folks (1934), Simple Speaks His Mind (1950), Simple
Takes a Wife (1953), and Best of Simple (1961). Hughes also wrote
the novels Not Without Laughter (1930) and Tambourines to Glory
(1958), the autobiographical books The Big Sea (1940) and I Wonder
as I Wander (1957), and the children’s books Black Misery (1969)
and The Sweet and Sour Animal Book (written 1936, published 1994). The
Collected Poems of Langston Hughes was published in 1994.
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