Description
Book SynopsisLangston Hughes, one of America's greatest writers, was an innovator of jazz poetry and a leader of the Harlem Renaissance whose poems and plays resonate widely today. This title collects the stories of Hughes and his friends in an era of uncertainty and reveals their visions of an idealized world - one without hunger, war, racism, and more.
Trade Review"The letters are held together by well-researched notes on black intellectuals' battles for racial and economic justice, and they paint a vivid picture of the poet's exuberant mind... Letters from Langston gives an excellet account of the racial and political challenges faced by this extraordinary writer." -- Rosemary Booth The Gay & Lesbian Review
Table of ContentsForeword by Robin D. G. Kelley Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: The Poet, the Crawfords, and the Pattersons PART ONE: THE TUMULTUOUS 1930S 1 * Wither White Philanthropy-Thank You and God for "The Weary Blues": October 1930-January 1932 2 * Moscow Bound in Black and White: March 1932-February 1933 3 * Horror in Scottsboro, Alabama, and War in Spain: May 1933-November 1937 4 * A People's Theatre in Harlem and Black Anti-Fascism on the Rise: January 1938-December 1939 PART TWO: THE FAR-REACHING 1940S 5 * Early Political Repression: January 1940- November 1941 6 * World War II and Black Radical Organizing: June 1942-July 1944 7 * Ebb and Flow-To Chicago, New York, San Francisco, and Back: July 1946- November 1949 PART THREE: THE FEARSOME 1950S AND THE PROMISING 1960S 8 * McCarthyism at Home, Independence Movements Abroad: July 1950-December 1959 9 * Civil Rights, Black Arts, and the People's Poet: February 1961-August 1966 Glossary Personae Index