Laurie F. Leach. Langston Hughes: A Biography.Laurie F. Leach. Langston Hughes Noun 1. Langston Hughes - United States writer (1902-1967) James Langston Hughes, Hughes : A Biography. Westport, CT: Greenwood P, 2004. 176 pp. $29.95. Laurie Leach's compact biography of Langston Hughes is part of a series designed for high schools and public libraries and is intended "specifically for student use" (ix). Lucidly written and solidly researched, it achieves its expressed purposes and will be a useful tool for high school students and faculty for many years to come. Regarding Hughes as "the most prominent African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race. poet of the twentieth century" (xiii), Leach makes excellent use of previous biographical studies of Hughes by Arnold Rampersad Arnold Rampersad (born 13 November 1941)is an acclaimed biographer and literary critic. The first volume his Life Of Langston Hughes was a Pulitzer Prize finalist. He was born in Trinidad. and Faith Berry as well as a broad range of literary responses to Hughes's poetry from early reviewers to contemporary critics. The result is a carefully balanced study of Hughes's life and times, one free from any narrow thesis or critical agenda that might otherwise distort Hughes's art. Leach is careful not to oversimplify o·ver·sim·pli·fy v. o·ver·sim·pli·fied, o·ver·sim·pli·fy·ing, o·ver·sim·pli·fies v.tr. To simplify to the point of causing misrepresentation, misconception, or error. v.intr. Hughes's character either by romanticizing him or underestimating him. She rightly stresses the paradoxical nature of his personality as one who had a Whitmanian tendency to celebrate the "people" but who in his own life was essentially a loner loner Psychiatry A single young man estranged from society and family, who suffers from psychogenic pain, and tends to live 'on the edge', vacillating between aggression and depression; loners often have unrealistic goals, but are unable to work towards those goals . While Hughes had several romantic relationships with women and who sometimes portrayed himself as unlucky in love, he always drew back rather deliberately from these relationships when marriage became a possibility. His close friendships with Countee Cullen Countee Cullen (May 30, 1903–January 9, 1946) was an African-American Romantic poet and an active participant in the Harlem Renaissance. Biography Countee Cullen was born with the name Countee LeRoy Porter and was abandoned by his mother at birth. , Alain Locke, and Ralph Ellison Noun 1. Ralph Ellison - United States novelist who wrote about a young Black man and his struggles in American society (1914-1994) Ellison, Ralph Waldo Ellison eventually fizzled out, as did his relationships with white patrons such as Noel Sullivan Noel Sullivan (born July 28, 1980), is a Welsh-born singer and actor. He was a member of the British pop group Hear'Say. Like the other members of the group, he won his part through the talent show Popstars. and Charlotte Osgood Mason. Throughout his life, Hughes cultivated a public persona as a warmly democratic poet who would bring together the rich assortment of people in America, yet, as Leach stresses, he had a life-long tendency "to hold himself aloof," perhaps to protect himself from "emotional vulnerability" and preserve his "creative independence" (79). Leach demonstrates Hughes's paradoxical desire both to identify with groups and somehow remain separate from them in her carefully nuanced discussion of his political involvements. During the 1920s and 30s he became strongly committed to leftist left·ism also Left·ism n. 1. The ideology of the political left. 2. Belief in or support of the tenets of the political left. left causes such as freeing the Scottsboro boys The case of the Scottsboro Boys arose in Scottsboro, Alabama during the 1930s, when nine black youths, ranging in age from twelve to nineteen, were accused of raping two white women, Victoria Price and Ruby Bates, one of whom would later recant. and fighting against fascism in Spain, and he enthusiastically praised Stalin's communist state This article is about a form of government in which the state operates under the control of a Communist Party. For information regarding communism as a form of society, as an ideology advocating that form of society, or as a popular movement, see the communism article. after an extended tour of the Soviet Union. But he never became a member of the Communist Party and kept his distance from other officially organized political groups. (His trip to Russia in 1932 ended, significantly, with him breaking away from his group and traveling back to the United States alone.) Although he was a life-long opponent of segregation and envisioned a racially integrated America in many of his best poems, Hughes was hesitant to become actively and publicly involved in the Civil Rights Movement. Leach points out that Hughes "never emerged as a prominent civil rights leader" (139), participating in relatively few demonstrations and turning down Martin Luther King's offer to join him in the Selma March. Hughes, who "disapproved of Black Nationalism and was dismayed by infighting in·fight·ing n. 1. Contentious rivalry or disagreement among members of a group or organization: infighting on the President's staff. 2. Fighting or boxing at close range. among civil rights groups" (144), preferred in his later years to take an individual stand against American racism in his newspaper columns and poetry such as The Panther and the Lash. Leach traces the roots of Hughes's "fierce independence" (5) to his childhood, which she describes as "bereft of light and warmth" (1). His father left the family shortly after Hughes was born, and their relationship was always deeply conflicted. His mother never understood his desire to be a writer and was often absent from his life as she pursued her own interests in a variety of locations. He was raised mainly by an elderly grandmother who died when he was 13, leaving him with a feeling of being "abandoned" (4). To make matters worse, he grew up in white neighborhoods, went to predominantly white schools, and sometimes felt himself an "outsider in the black community" (3). It was not until he went to Harlem in 1921 that Hughes could feel himself an integral part of African American life, something that he celebrated throughout his entire writing career. My one complaint about the book concerns its proportions. Given its compact size and its non-specialized audience, it seems hard to justify Leach's very detailed chapter on Hughes's much-discussed battles with Zora Neale Hurston Zora Neale Hurston (January 7, 1891 – January 28, 1960) was an American folklorist and author during the time of the Harlem Renaissance, best known for the 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God. over the composition of Mule Bone. It is also difficult to see the need for Leach's even more detailed discussion of Hughes's spotty work in film and theatre when his main achievement was in poetry and fiction. (Although Hughes was once advised by Arna Bontemps to "stop fooling around with theatre," he never could take the advice of his good friend.) It would be useful to have much more analysis of his major works, connecting them more firmly to Hughes's life and times. These quibbles aside, Langston Hughes: A Biography is a solid achievement. It will be of considerable use not only to high school students and teachers but also general readers interested in deepening their knowledge of a major African American writer. Reviewed by Robert Butler Canisius College |
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