Language Arts: Author Study: Langston Hughes and the Jazz Age
Exploring poetry, identity, music, and the Harlem Renaissance
Language Arts: Author Study: Langston Hughes and the Jazz Age
Exploring poetry, identity, music, and the Harlem Renaissance
Language Arts - Grade 9-12
- 1
Langston Hughes is often associated with the Harlem Renaissance. Explain what the Harlem Renaissance was and why it matters when studying Hughes's work.
Think about art, literature, music, and the growth of Black cultural expression in the early twentieth century.
The Harlem Renaissance was a major cultural and artistic movement centered in Harlem during the 1920s and 1930s. It matters when studying Hughes because his poetry, essays, and stories helped express Black identity, pride, struggle, music, and everyday life during that period. - 2
In Hughes's poem "The Negro Speaks of Rivers," the speaker connects Black history to ancient rivers. Explain how the image of rivers helps develop the poem's meaning.
Consider what rivers can symbolize, such as time, movement, life, and memory.
The rivers represent deep history, endurance, memory, and connection across time. By naming ancient rivers, Hughes suggests that Black identity is ancient, powerful, and tied to major civilizations, not limited to the history of slavery or racism in the United States. - 3
Hughes was influenced by jazz and blues music. Describe two ways jazz or blues rhythms can affect the sound or structure of a poem.
Think about repetition, call and response, improvisation, and strong beats.
Jazz or blues rhythms can make a poem sound musical through repetition, variation, syncopation, and conversational phrasing. These rhythms can also shape the poem's structure by creating a pattern that feels like a song, performance, or improvisation. - 4
Read this line from Hughes's poem "I, Too": "I, too, sing America." Explain the significance of the word "too" in this line.
The word "too" shows that the speaker is claiming a rightful place in American identity. It suggests that Black Americans have been excluded or ignored, but they are also part of the nation and deserve recognition, equality, and respect. - 5
Compare the tone of "I, Too" with the tone of a protest speech. What feelings or attitudes do they share, and how is Hughes's poem different from a direct speech?
Focus on tone words such as proud, determined, hopeful, restrained, and defiant.
Both "I, Too" and a protest speech can share feelings of confidence, resistance, hope, and demand for justice. Hughes's poem is different because it uses compressed language, symbolism, and a quiet but powerful voice rather than direct argument or public address. - 6
Hughes often wrote about ordinary people, including workers, musicians, children, and people living in cities. Why might a writer choose to focus on everyday people instead of famous leaders?
A writer might focus on everyday people to show that their experiences are important and worthy of art. Hughes's focus on ordinary people helps reveal the dignity, creativity, humor, pain, and strength within daily Black life. - 7
Explain how the Jazz Age setting shaped Hughes's writing. Include at least one historical or cultural detail in your response.
Use details such as Harlem, jazz clubs, the Great Migration, or new artistic freedom.
The Jazz Age shaped Hughes's writing by surrounding him with new music, nightlife, migration, and artistic experimentation. In Harlem, jazz clubs, poets, artists, and audiences helped create a lively cultural environment that influenced his rhythms, subjects, and celebration of Black creativity. - 8
Hughes sometimes used a speaker who sounds conversational rather than formal. Identify one effect of using a conversational voice in poetry.
A conversational voice can make a poem feel personal, direct, and accessible. It can also help the speaker sound like a real person, which makes the emotions and ideas feel immediate and authentic. - 9
Choose one major theme in Hughes's work, such as identity, racial pride, inequality, hope, music, or dreams. Explain how that theme connects to the Harlem Renaissance.
Pick one theme and connect it to the larger cultural movement, not just to one poem.
One major theme in Hughes's work is racial pride. This theme connects to the Harlem Renaissance because the movement encouraged Black writers and artists to celebrate their culture, history, language, and creativity in public and powerful ways. - 10
Write a short analytical paragraph explaining why Langston Hughes remains an important American writer. Your paragraph should include a claim, at least one supporting reason, and a concluding sentence.
A strong response should state that Langston Hughes remains important because he gave powerful literary voice to Black life, culture, struggle, and hope. It should support the claim with a reason, such as his use of jazz rhythms, his role in the Harlem Renaissance, or his focus on equality and identity, and it should end with a clear concluding sentence.