Collected Works of Langston Hughes v. 7; Early Simple Stories

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A01=Langston Hughes
African American psychology
African American studies
African-American authors
African-American education
African-American experience
African-American history
African-American scholarly books
Author_Langston Hughes
black authors
black education
black studies
black studies in history
books by African-American writers
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Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper
early simple stories
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_fiction
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Langston Hughes
race studies
Simple Speaks His Mind
Simple Takes a Wife
social inequalities
studies in black relationships
themes in black society
topics in black studies

Product details

  • ISBN 9780826213709
  • Weight: 775g
  • Dimensions: 163 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Feb 2002
  • Publisher: University of Missouri Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Jesse B. Semple first sprang to life in Langston Hughes's weekly Chicago Defender column in 1943. Almost immediately, the ""Simple stories,"" as they were routinely called, had a large and ever-increasing audience. Simple soon became Harlem's Everyman - an ordinary black workingman, representative of the masses of black folks in the 1940s. Simple had migrated to Harlem, like many other blacks, seeking to escape the racism of the South, and he celebrated his new freedoms despite the economic struggles he still confronted. Simple's bar buddy and foil in the stories is the better-educated, more articulate Boyd who has never lived in the South. Their conversations permit Simple to speak the wisdom of the working class. By the time the first book of Simple stories was published, Hughes had honed and polished these two characters, enhancing the distinctions between the vernacular language of Simple and the more educated diction of his friend. Remaining within the Afrocentric world that was his chosen sphere, Hughes makes clear the message that Simple and Boyd are very much alike; both are black men in a racially unbalanced society. Both exist in a world within a world, in Harlem, the separate black community of New York City. Countless exchanges between Simple and his companion offer wit and wisdom that remind contemporary readers why Langston Hughes is so special.