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Langston Hughes Analysis

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Langston Hughes is an African American male poet, who constructed his poems during the Harlem Renaissance period. Many of Hughes' poems are inspired by life events and portray the struggles black Americans face in everyday society. Hughes' works tend to include the idea of one's true identity as an American or the conjured idea of the "American Dream", the realization of oneself and racism. His poems “Theme for English B” and “I, Too” are both pieces of work that perfectly explain the racial inequality and imbalance within America's system. Hughes' poem, “Theme for English B,” written in 1951 begins with an instructor telling his students from his English B class to go home and write a paper. The length of the paper should be one page and whatever theme the student chooses for the paper must be written in a way that is true to them. The writers first response to the assignment is curiosity, and the speaker wonders about the simplicity of the assignment by saying "I wonder if it's that simple?" (Hughes l. 6). This line can be interpreted as the writer trying to figure out how easy or difficult it may or may not be to write what is really true to him being a Black male in America. The writer then states that he is “twenty-two, colored, and born in Winston Salem” (l. 7). He continues to say where he attended school and how he went to three different schools and how he ended up at a “college on a hill above Harlem” (l. 8). The writer follows up with the fact that he is the only

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