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Analysis Of The Poem ' Harlem '

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James Mercer Langston Hughes was an American poet; a Joplin, Missouri native and an active, versatile writer, earning acclaim as a poet, novelist, playwright and columnist. He was one of the first poets to explore an innovative sing-songy, stylized delivery called jazz poetry.
As an African-American, his point of view, collectively synergized with this then-new literary art, catapulted his writings between the 1930s - 1960s. He is often credited as the leader of the Harlem Renaissance, and “famously wrote about the period that ‘the negro was in vogue.’” (Langston).
Throughout his body of work, Hughes spoke eloquently to the full spectrum of dreams - both their inspirational power and their heavy burden, if not fully realized. His famed …show more content…

In his 1951 poem, the title alone, “Harlem (Dream Deferred) makes the reader immediately conscious of the speaker’s dismissal of ownership.The piece examines, upon deferral, what happens to a dream - “Does it dry up / like a raisin the sun?”
Hughes later deduces “Maybe it just sags like a heavy load.” There, with its indication of weight, the reader draws comparison to a dream being a burden - an unbearable, unattainable measuring stick in the speaker’s life, or in this piece’s case, America’s life.
Hughes, now older, having seen “more of the world” is grappling with the injustices of equality and equity. Can an African-American attain his/her dream without it wilting under the prejudices of an unfair America? He saw the dreams of many residents of Harlem, New York disintegrate in the wake of World War II. Some read this poem as a warning, believing that the speaker “argues that deferred dreams will lead to social unrest. Notably, Lorraine Hansberry chose a line from this poem as the title of her famous play, A Raisin in the Sun, which explores the idea of delayed dreams in the world of a black family living in the South Side of Chicago during the 1950s. Both the play and Hughes 's poem champion the power of pursuing dreams, and both comment on the state of civil rights in America.(Shmoop)”
This work seems to continually call for the

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