"Poetry is a deal of joy and pain and wonder, with a dash of the dictionary." ~Kahlil Gibran

Thursday, May 5, 2011

HARLEM by Langston Hughes

The poem is entitles "Harlem" but it has an universal value. It spoke to me especially as an immigrant in New York having so many dreams, which some came true and some got "deferred". I don't think you have to be from Harlem or an immigrant to relate to this short and inspirational poem. It's about a dream that was put on hold. The poem starts with a question that seems so simple and mundane but in fact it has such depth. In the attempt to answer it, a series of rhetorical questions follow. The images although simple are very powerful. Hughes uses similes "like a raisin in the sun", "like a sore", "like rotten meat", "like a syrupy sweet" and puts them in contrast. Hughes uses open form; the lengths of the lines differ and some rhymes can be found (sun-run; meat-sweet). The poem has a certain rhythm, almost jazzy. The last stanza isn't made up from a simile but a metaphor "Or does it explode?". The readers are urged to find answers or start questioning what happened to their dreams. It got me thinking...

2 comments:

  1. I agree that this poem has a universal value to it. I feel like many of Langston Hughes poetry has universal values to them. Messages that everyone understands no matter where they are from or what the color of their skin is. His poetry shows commonalities among humans.This poem is about a dreams being put on hold and this is a very big commonality among a lot of people. It's very relatable because a lot of people for one reason or another put their dreams on hold and it makes you question dreams you may have once had and what happened to your ambitions to make them happen.

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  2. See my comments on this one on blogs from previous classes, on the opening post to the class blog, and see study sheets: all will help place this poem in its ideological and cultural context (the Harlem Renaissance, and what became of the aspirations in 1950s America, and consequences that followed...)

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