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Langston Hughes Essay

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Langston Hughes

Langston Hughes was born on February 1, 1902, in Joplin, Missouri. He was named after his father, James Hughes, but was known as Langston. He was the only child from his parents James and Carrie Hughes. His parents were not married for long because of an unhappy marriage. When they separated, Langston was left with his mother, who left him behind to move from city to city to find work. Langston ended up living with his 70 year-old grandmother in Lawrence, Kansas. He lived with her until he was 13, and then he moved back with his mother in Lincoln, Kansas after his grandmother died in 1915.
Langston, his mother, and his new stepfather lived in Lincoln for a year, until his stepfather found work and then they all …show more content…

In that year, he began writing poetry of distinction.

After Langston graduated, he planned to return to Mexico, and to try to convince his father to pay for his college at Columbia University in New York City. On the way to Mexico, on a train, Langston thought about his past and his future and wrote “The Negro Speaks of Rivers”. When Langston got to Mexico, tension between him and his father was very strong. His father wanted him to become and engineer, and Langston wanted to be a writer. Langston sent poetry to Brownies Book and Crisis Magazine, and it was accepted and published. This impressed his father, so he agree to pay for college.

Langston entered college in the fall of 1921, and after his first year he dropped out. This is when he became involved with the art scene in Harlem. Langston began regularly publishing his work in the Crisis and Opportunity magazines. When Langston won first prize for his poem "The Weary Blues", which was in the poetry section of the 1925 Opportunity magazine literary contest, his literary career began. His first volume of poetry called The Weary Blues came out in 1926.

In Langston’s poetry, he uses the rhythms of African American music, particularly blues and jazz. He liked blues and jazz extremely. By using this style, his poetry was distinctive from other writers. Hughes's second volume of poetry Fine Clothes to a Jew, was not accepted at the time of

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