BroadwayWorld: Review: LANGSTON IN HARLEM Celebrates Langston Hughes With Style and Heart at 54 Below
Langston Hughes, the poet laureate of the Harlem Renaissance, was a complicated figure. His writings spanned the mediums of poetry, short stories, journalism, novels, political essays, plays, and ...
Review: LANGSTON IN HARLEM Celebrates Langston Hughes With Style and Heart at 54 Below
Yale University's Beinecke Library is displaying Langston Hughes's collection of rent party cards, which advertised fundraising gatherings in an era of discriminatory Harlem rent. Rent party cards ...
insider.si.edu: Remember me to Harlem : the letters of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, 1925-1964 / edited by Emily Bernard
Remember me to Harlem : the letters of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, 1925-1964 / edited by Emily Bernard
The man. The poet. The legend. Embodying all three of the above titles, Langston Hughes was known as a key figure in both literary and artistic spaces during the Harlem Renaissance era. During the ...
The New York Times: Imagining a Future for Langston Hughes’s Harlem Brownstone
We are always in dialogue with Langston Hughes' short poem Harlem, first published in 1951. I can hear Hughes in the background of Dr. King’s “I Have a Dream” speech in 1963. I hear Hughes’ poetic ...
Langston Hughes was born , in Joplin, Missouri. Notably one of the most prolific black writers of his time and debatably one of the most established writers of all time. With pieces ...
JSTOR Daily: Rural Literary Reuse of Langston Hughes's Poetry in the 1920s and 1930s