10 interesting facts about Langston Hughes

Who sparked a revolution, instead of picket signs and marches, he did it with a pen. Langston Hughes is famous, and he is renowned for his contributions to the literary movement of the Harlem Renaissance. His poetic writings led this literary movement to the forefront and shaped America

1. He is an award-winning writer

Langston Hughes won many awards for his wonderful work in literary prowess. Throughout his lifetime Langstone had many poetic writing awards. He won the intercollegiate poetry award in 1927, the spring han medal in 1960 and the Rosenwald fellowship in 1941.

2. He studied engineering

Langston Hughes went to Columbia’s school of mines, engineering, and chemistry between 1921 to 1922. His father was in love with engineering, so he attended engineering school to please his father. Later Langston decided that this wasn’t his path and dream in life; he dropped out after a year. Hughes participated in the Harlem cultural movement during his time at Columbia. He dropped out of Columbia and applied for a scholarship, and he graduated from the school with a Bachelor of Arts from “Lincoln University” using the scholarship.

3. Langston never married during his lifetime

Hughes’ curious and anxious nature and love of writing helped him travel places worldwide. His world experience never changed him to have feelings for anybody and have a relationship for marriage; Hughes maintained his unmarried status throughout his life. He was never got in love and didn’t have any children.

4. Langston had a mixed ancestry

His great paternal grandfather was a Jewish slave trader, and his maternal great-grandfather was a white captain. Both his paternal and maternal grandmothers were enslaved.

5. He wrote Negro speaks of the river at the age of 17

While crossing the Mississippi River with his father on a trip to visit Mexico, he was inspired to write this book. It was one of the most famous poetry works he ever wrote.

6. Hughes wrote poetry till his demis

Mr. Langston Hughes, Negro poet and playwright. Chicago, Illinois - PICRYL Public Domain Search

Hughes never stopped writing. In his lifetime. he wrote until he died of cancer in 1967. What a writer in history was, Hughes’s image remained to be. His last book was the panter and the lash. It was talking about the black power movement.

7. Hughes was a major leader of the Harlem Renaissance

People often think of that as Harlem started in the 1920s in Harlem. Hughes had long careers that were up to the 1920s In Harlem. In his poetic work the Negro he wrote Negro in vogue ironically, he meant that Harlem was in vogue

8. He was the innovator of jazz poetry

Hughes invented jazz music. He wrote the jazz poem the weary blues. In this jazz music, the poem’s rhythm, when spoken aloud, echoed the sounds that jazz music makes.

9. He was a news report for the defender

Besides his famously known contributions to the Harlem resistance, he wrote the defender magazine. It was an influential African-American magazine. He wrote for nearly 20 years in this magazine.

10. Besides poetry, he wrote several poetry plays

Chicago, Illinois. Good Sheperd Community Center. Players rehearsing a new play by Langston Hughes - PICRYL Public Domain Search

He could write on anything like plays and short stories. A few of his famous plays include “mulatto black nativity,” tambourines to glory, and the Jerico- Jim crow.

 

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