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Dreams in Langston Hughes Poems

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Langston Hughes’ challenging background, ethnicity, and era of life can all be thought of reasons as to why his style of writing relates among discrimination and unsettling topics. Although his writing can be said to bring hope to the African Americans, his style can be frightening and daunting when taken the time to read his pieces. They may not seem real, but they are his way of interpreting and informing the future of what African Americans, like himself, had to go through and what they had to experience. Although some of his writing pieces tell about horrible and sad times of the African American people, throughout his poems he brings hope and peace for the culture. The pieces he wrote may not be pleasant to read, however, the past …show more content…

Most have seen these things or felt them at a single time. Using phrases like these help the readers to understand all the feelings that went into writing the poem. Langston Hughes was not a cryptic writer. His feelings and thoughts were left on the page. In this poem his thoughts were said to be more focused on the division between different cultures and wishing for the divider to be broken. “Let America Be America Again” has a similar theme. It not only reflects the feelings the African American culture had during this period, but it makes the reader feel these feelings too. The beginning statement in the poem, “Let America Be America Again,” makes the reader question what America was. What was America like? Another line from the poem, “Let it be the dream it used to be,” directly relates to the theme in the previous poem “Harlem” because in both poems Langston Hughes wishes and wants to take action to recover the way people used to be treated. The basis of “Let America Be America Again” is that, in Langston Hughes’ opinion, everyone should be equal and treated fairly. No one should be discriminated because of their background. Literary critic James Presley says that the poem was written in order to beg for the Dream that never was. His opinion is that Langston Hughes’ view of the so-called “American Dream” was not really a dream at all. He goes into detail that Langston Hughes’ saw the dream as “ragged, uneven, splotched, and often unattainable goal

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