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Theme Of Racial Pride In Langston Hughes

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Racial Pride Found within Langston Hughes's Poetry
Langston Hughes was an African American writer who took the literary world by storm in the twentieth century. Hughes was known for incorporating African American culture into his poems and plays. Langston Hughes did this so much so that per, "Masterplots II: African American Literature" he was "…recognized as the unofficial poet laureate of the African American urban experience…" (Niemi). Hughes has written several poems in his career. Most of them have a theme of racial pride incorporated somewhere in the poems. By analyzing Langston Hughes's writings, it can be inferred that the poems "The Negro Speaks of Rivers", "Negro" and "I, Too" all have the theme of racial pride.
The first poem that has aspects of racial pride is "The Negro Speaks of Rivers". The poem "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" was Langston Hughes's first official poem. This poem emphasizes what it means to be black by referring to Hughes's African roots. He talks about this in the middle of the poem by saying "I bathed in the Euphrates when dawns were young. /I built my hut near the Congo and it lulled me to sleep. / I looked upon the Nile and raised the pyramids above it. / I heard the singing of the Mississippi" (Hughes). By reading this excerpt from the poem it can be inferred that Hughes is proud of his origins. This quote demonstrates that Hughes is trying to reveal "…the connections between the history of the African American and the four important rivers

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