The article investigates the dialectics between homeland and identity in the poetry of the Sudanese poet, Mohamed Al-Fayturi and his literary master, Langston Hughes in order to underline their attitudes toward crucial issues integral to the African and African-American experience such as identity, racism, enslavement and colonisation. The article argues that – in Hughes’s early poetry –Africa is depicted as the land of ancient civilisations in order to strengthen African-American feelings of ethnic pride during the Harlem Renaissance. This idealistic image of a pre-slavery, a pre-colonial Africa, argues the paper, disappears from the poetry of Hughes, after the Harlem Renaissance, to be replaced with a more realistic image of Africa under ...
Born in Joplin, Missouri, in 1902, Langston Hughes became the most significant personality of the Ne...
The paper examines the poems of Langston Hughes, especially ‘The Negro Speaks of Rivers’ and ‘Dream ...
As Paul Gilroy has argued, the Black Atlantic is a cultural and literary network that has emerged in...
The article investigates the dialectics between homeland and identity in the poetry of the Sudanese ...
In his attempt to challenge colonial hegemony and promote the colonized sense of identity, the Afric...
The article addresses the question of African inspirations in the works of African-American artists....
Set up in the backdrop of the Harlem Renaissance, this paper seeks to explore the response of the Bl...
Langston Hughes is undoubtedly the most famous African America poet. However, while critical studies...
This paper aims to analyze how Langston Hughes through his poem “One-Way-Ticket” while expressing wh...
In his attempt to challenge colonial hegemony and promote the colonized sense of identity, the Sudan...
This paper examines the relationship between language and diaspora by trying to look beyond the ques...
The stereotyping discourse in which the African was seen as the bestial other andconsequently the lo...
1920s of American history have been known and called as the Jazz Age. This Age is featured by flouri...
Langston Hughes, a famous African American poet of the Harlem Renaissance, raises his voice like ot...
This paper investigates the place of maternal love in the formation of the African American self and...
Born in Joplin, Missouri, in 1902, Langston Hughes became the most significant personality of the Ne...
The paper examines the poems of Langston Hughes, especially ‘The Negro Speaks of Rivers’ and ‘Dream ...
As Paul Gilroy has argued, the Black Atlantic is a cultural and literary network that has emerged in...
The article investigates the dialectics between homeland and identity in the poetry of the Sudanese ...
In his attempt to challenge colonial hegemony and promote the colonized sense of identity, the Afric...
The article addresses the question of African inspirations in the works of African-American artists....
Set up in the backdrop of the Harlem Renaissance, this paper seeks to explore the response of the Bl...
Langston Hughes is undoubtedly the most famous African America poet. However, while critical studies...
This paper aims to analyze how Langston Hughes through his poem “One-Way-Ticket” while expressing wh...
In his attempt to challenge colonial hegemony and promote the colonized sense of identity, the Sudan...
This paper examines the relationship between language and diaspora by trying to look beyond the ques...
The stereotyping discourse in which the African was seen as the bestial other andconsequently the lo...
1920s of American history have been known and called as the Jazz Age. This Age is featured by flouri...
Langston Hughes, a famous African American poet of the Harlem Renaissance, raises his voice like ot...
This paper investigates the place of maternal love in the formation of the African American self and...
Born in Joplin, Missouri, in 1902, Langston Hughes became the most significant personality of the Ne...
The paper examines the poems of Langston Hughes, especially ‘The Negro Speaks of Rivers’ and ‘Dream ...
As Paul Gilroy has argued, the Black Atlantic is a cultural and literary network that has emerged in...