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Forgotten. Why?
If you don't want to read the poem (it runs to 100 pages in Spenserian stanza), that's fine, but at least read the dedicatory address. Why is it, when Black History Month comes around, I hear plenty about George Washington Carver, every year, but I never hear anything about this man?
Even without the poem, that address ought to have ensured that this man's name would be honored far more than it has been. http://quod.lib.umich.edu/a/amverse/...;view=fulltext |
I would broaden the point. The poets of the Harlem Renaissance wrote a substantial amount of poetry, but it seems that colleges and anthologies focus on a very small percentage of their work, as in the case of Langston Hughes.
I suspect that the fact that much of the work doesn't fit into the easy narratives of the contemporary academic world accounts for so much work being neglected. For instance, most "dialect poems" by Harlem Renaissance poets make us cringe today, but nonetheless it is important for us to understand what they were trying to do and how their work differs from far less sympathetic "dialect poems" written by white authors with reprehensible motives. Hughes' writing for the stage, too, has been largely ignored. |
Quote:
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/236576 |
Hi Will.
We never hear about Samuel Allen either , who in my opinion is a living treasure and may not be around much longer. Allen was Deputy Assistant District Attorney in New York City from 1946 to 1947, a civilian attorney with the U.S. Armed Forces in Europe (1951-1955), and in private practice in New York from 1956 to 1958. He taught law at Texas Southern University from 1958 to 1960. In 1961, he was appointed to the position of assistant general counsel of the U.S. Information Agency and served in that position until 1964. He was then named chief counsel of the Community Relations Service in Washington, D.C., a position he occupied from 1965 to 1968. In 1968, he was named Avalon Professor of Humanities at the Tuskegee Institute, where he taught for two years. In 1971 he became a professor of English at Boston University where he taught until he retired in 1981. Allen also taught at Wesleyan University (1970-71) and was writer-in-residence at Tuskegee and at Rutgers University He was instrumental in public policy leading up to the NAACP, part of the negritude movement, a social scientist/writer/lawyer/professor. He also wrote under the name Paul Vesey. He is still alive and one of the most gentle of gentlemen one could ever meet. We don't hear enough about so many unsung people. He's one of them. Don't know if I'm allowed to post a poem of his in this thread-but they are easy to pull up online. Eileen |
Thanks for introducing me to Mr. Allen.
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Per Mike's point--I don't think that's quite fair, at least in places with decent-sized African American studies programs. I myself tend to use McKay in classes more than Hughes--in part because McKay serves my purposes as a historian a bit better, in part because I rate him higher as a poet than Hughes.
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William, i wanted to say thanks. I've never heard of either of these
guys, but have spent a lot of the weekend reading their work. God bless the internet, and the Sphere. |
You're welcome, conny, and thanks for your post. I agree with your sentiments re: the Internet & the Sphere.
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