Glenn Hughes

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    Born on February 1, 1902, Hughes wrote of his own experiences with racism and white supremacy. In his essay, “The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain”. Hughes asserts that most of his poems are racial in themes and treatment derived from the life he knew (375). Hughes, who has written a host of short stories, musicals, autobiographies, plays, novels, operas, and poems, has also utilized religious verse to highlight the contradictions of white Americans. In his works, Hughes often told the…

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    The Movie, “The Breakfast Club” by John Hughes and the short story “The Bicycle” written by Jillian Horton share many similarities in regards to, rebellion, living dreams through others, and characters throughout both stories. It’s important to discuss these two different stories because of the effect they can have on an influential person, regardless of being about two totally distinct stories from two very different times. In both “The Breakfast Club” and “The Bicycle” there is a strong…

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    cultural, musical, artical, and literary celebration of the African American race. This era was led by many different activists and leaders. One, Langston Hughes, was a decorated and talented poet and playwright. He was able to influence the Harlem Renaissance through his poetry and playwriting skills. Born in Joplin, Missouri, Langston Hughes was, in addition to a poet, was a son of a mother who traveled very far. Prior to high school, he was praised for his poetry at his grammar school in…

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    The history of the African American liberation in the United States has been defined by the efforts of the collective. Within that collective, individuals utilized their own personal gifts, passions, and crafts to give voice to the African-American community and take a stand against the systematic oppression black people were subjected to. Of these efforts, various forms of art were, and have been, extremely instrumental in the fight for civil rights in the United States. The multitude of poets,…

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    The Chicago spirit is like no other when it comes to the arts, cultural conflicts, self-identity questions, and the search for truth and reasoning for the novels, poems, and short stories written by great authors and poets such as Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Arna Bontemps, Margaret Walker, and Gwendolyn Brooks. Richard Wright founded the South Side Writers Group, whose membership included Bontemps and Walker in 1936, in order to build a foundation of empowerment and inspiration to bright…

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    This article discussed the early accomplishments, documentaries, and controversies surrounding the life of Henry Louis Gates Jr. Born on September 16, 1950, in Keyser, West Virginia, Gates continued to travel and study internationally before he became in charge of Harvard’s African-American studies department. Additionally, Gates was an exceptional student who continued to excel academically, he graduated with a degree in history from Yale University in the year 1973. He continued to pursue high…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was an artistic, intellectual and literary movement that helped shape African American culture. It gave African Americans a voice to express themselves through a variety of means. Authors like Langston Hughes and W.E.B Dubois, musicians like Billie Holiday, and artists like Lois Mailou Jones and Aaron Douglas, were some of the most influential people during this movement. Before the new movement black artists rarely concerned themselves subject matters that included their…

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    Sing it, Dance it, Write it, Paint it Just like many of the great visionaries of the Harlem Renaissance, Aaron Douglas, one of the leading visual artists of the era, was not born and raised in Harlem. This artistic genius came out of Topeka, Kansas, where he developed an artistic sense of community and isolation. Before Douglas became a “pioneering Africanist” of the Harlem Renaissance, he received his bachelors degree of fine arts at the University of Nebraska, and taught in Missouri…

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    around thinkers of the African American community. They were escaping the oppression of the American South for a place where they could gather and let their creativity free. Some of the major names that were a part of the Renaissance included Langston Hughes (poet), Claude McKay (writer/poet), Zora Neale Hurston (novelist) and many more. The Harlem Renaissance wasn't just a gathering of intellectuals it was a symbol of black pride in an otherwise depressive society for them. The black community…

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    Jacob Lawrence “The Migration of the Negro” A. After viewing this painting by Jacob Lawrence, there were various observation I made about the form of this painting. First off, the painting utilizes various diagonal lines on the back of the subjects, which gives the painting the sense of movement that the artist intended to depict. In addition, the painting features mainly geometric forms such as triangles, circles and rectangles; rather than depicting the figures with organic shapes. In terms…

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