“The Weary Blues” (1925) is a poem by Langston Hughes resonating both thematically and stylistically with the blues, a form that in Ralph Ellison’s words constitutes an “autobiographical chronicle of personal catastrophe expressed lyrically.” One of the first works of blues performance in literature, the poem describes a pianist singing a blues number in a Harlem club. The chapter will focus on the healing power of poetry and music as revealed in “The Weary Blues”. Simultaneously both a melancholic method of grievance and a therapy for sorrow, Hughes’s poem ‒ and the gloomy blues song it evokes ‒ nurture a cathartic purification of the emotional condition of sadness and loneliness. The very act of writing and singing the blues releases the ...
In Langston Hughes’s poetics, the blues assumed a cathartic role in facing adversities, taking the s...
The history of the African American community has been inexorably bound to the concepts of oppressio...
In his youth, Langston Hughes wrote poetry imitating popular Negro verse forms, but as he matured an...
“The Weary Blues” (1925) is a poem by Langston Hughes resonating both thematically and stylistically...
In Langston Hughes’s poetics, the blues assumed a cathartic role in facing adversities, taking the s...
The goal of this essay is to look at the poems “The Weary Blues” and “JAZZTETMUTED” (hereafter to be...
Drawing on a deep understanding of the shades and structures of the blues, Steven C. Tracy elucidate...
The preeminence of Langston Hughes as a seminal figure in twentieth century literature is a well-chr...
This research, based on the insights of theories in the field of music and literature, tries to answ...
This paper will discuss the emergence of the blues into American literature, focusing on Langston Hu...
In the first half of the 1920s, the New Negro movement aimed to capture the changing African America...
In the following essay, Tracy examines the influence of music—specifically the blues and gospel sing...
1920s of American history have been known and called as the Jazz Age. This Age is featured by flouri...
One of Langston Hughes’s very last poems brought him back to his origins, both poetical and politica...
grantor: University of TorontoThe tenth-century Old English lament and the twentieth-centu...
In Langston Hughes’s poetics, the blues assumed a cathartic role in facing adversities, taking the s...
The history of the African American community has been inexorably bound to the concepts of oppressio...
In his youth, Langston Hughes wrote poetry imitating popular Negro verse forms, but as he matured an...
“The Weary Blues” (1925) is a poem by Langston Hughes resonating both thematically and stylistically...
In Langston Hughes’s poetics, the blues assumed a cathartic role in facing adversities, taking the s...
The goal of this essay is to look at the poems “The Weary Blues” and “JAZZTETMUTED” (hereafter to be...
Drawing on a deep understanding of the shades and structures of the blues, Steven C. Tracy elucidate...
The preeminence of Langston Hughes as a seminal figure in twentieth century literature is a well-chr...
This research, based on the insights of theories in the field of music and literature, tries to answ...
This paper will discuss the emergence of the blues into American literature, focusing on Langston Hu...
In the first half of the 1920s, the New Negro movement aimed to capture the changing African America...
In the following essay, Tracy examines the influence of music—specifically the blues and gospel sing...
1920s of American history have been known and called as the Jazz Age. This Age is featured by flouri...
One of Langston Hughes’s very last poems brought him back to his origins, both poetical and politica...
grantor: University of TorontoThe tenth-century Old English lament and the twentieth-centu...
In Langston Hughes’s poetics, the blues assumed a cathartic role in facing adversities, taking the s...
The history of the African American community has been inexorably bound to the concepts of oppressio...
In his youth, Langston Hughes wrote poetry imitating popular Negro verse forms, but as he matured an...