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Impact Of Langston Hughes's Contribution To Harlem Renaissance

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Langston Hughes contribution to Harlem Renaissance
Harlem was founded back in the 17th century as a Dutch outpost. Harlem adjoins New York City and host a large population of the African American Community. The blacks found New York City to be more accommodative to their culture and ideologies, during the great migration of the early 1900s, Harlem became the major destination and it became home to many African Americans. [1] Harlem received over time, Harlem developed from a farming village to become a huge settlement for the African American people and later a cultural center and a Cultural Revolution hub for the African American culture where great artist hail from.
The major boom in the Cultural Revolution was realized in the 1920s and …show more content…

One of the most notable figures in the Harlem renaissance was Langston Hughes, also referred to as “Harlem’s poet”. Hughes was born in 1902 to an unstable family. Hughes knew the struggles of the African Americans and the challenges of a broken family all too well. His father had a prejudice towards the black culture. His parents went thru a divorce and his father left for Mexico leaving him behind with his mother. It was hard for the mother to raise Him as well as look for income. She therefore took him to stay his grandmother. When the grandmother died, Hughes reunited with his mother and her second husband. [3]
Hughes was to later go to Mexico to try and reconcile with his father but this was futile. His father wanted him to take a ‘manly’/ practical career but Hughes was adamant on his dream of becoming a writer.
Hughes was only 19 when he wrote his first poem in 1919. In 1926, Hughes published his first book and went on writing more poems, plays and column in the Chicago Defender. In his works, Hughes addressed the issues affecting the black people, spoke against the vices and celebrated the lives of the black community and their culture. [4]
Hughes had a very creative way of portraying the life of the African Americans colorfully in his literature. The life and works of Hughes contributed greatly to the renaissance. The works of Hughes appealed to all races; calling upon “Negros” to come together united by their struggles and appealing to the

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