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The Collected Works of Langston Hughes,
Volume 2

The Poems: 1941-1950

Edited with an Introduction
by Arnold Rampersad

ISBN 0-8262-1340-5
312 pages
 6 x 9
Index, 2001
$34.95t

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"Langston Hughes is a titanic figure in 20th- century American literature . . . a powerful interpreter of the American experience. . . . His poems are as vital as ever."—Philadelphia Inquirer

"[Hughes's] poetry has a pulse, a beauty and familiar kindness. . . . Much of it delights, even dazzles. His best work sticks with you--forever."—Cleveland Plain Dealer

Volume 2 includes the books Shakespeare in Harlem (1942), Jim Crow's Last Stand (1943), Fields of Wonder (1947), and One-Way Ticket (1949). Starting around 1940, Hughes turned away from radical socialism toward strong support for the national war effort; as a poet, he resumed his experimentation in the blues, as Shakespeare in Harlem brilliantly demonstrates. With this change in political emphasis came a renewed commitment to the achievement of civil rights for blacks, which Jim Crow's Last Stand vigorously asserts. In contrast, Fields of Wonder was Hughes's only book devoted almost entirely to lyric verse; but the next volume, One-Way Ticket, restored the balance that was essential to his creative expression as a poet.

About the Editor

Arnold Rampersad is Professor of English at Stanford University in California. He is the author, coauthor, or editor of numerous publications, including The Life of Langston Hughes, Jackie Robinson: A Biography, and, with Arthur Ashe, Days of Grace: A Memoir.


Other books in the Collected Works of Langston Hughes Series


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