Date: 6/27/11 Read the Langston Hughes poem "Dream Deferred" again: Dream Deferred What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up Like a raisin in the sun? Or fester like a sore-- and then run? Does it stink like rotten meat? Or crust and sugar over-- like a syrupy sweet? Maybe it just sags like a heavy load Or does it explode? Look up definitions for the words defer and fester and write them down. Identify the five similes Hughes uses in the poem. Explain
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gold-digging culture the show encouraged‚ Chinese audience‚ yet‚ devotedly followed the show because the show are “honest” and depicted the de facto values of the young generation(Yan Mu‚ cited in Bergman‚2010). Another example illustrated in He(2012)’s journal is another prominent show ‚The Voice Of China. He(2012) analyses the core magic of the show is the ordinariness of the contestants which aroused the consensus of the audience and most importantly‚ encouraged the viewers to never give up( Peggy
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even organization. They should then be able to discuss these differences further explaining how they are different. Such as “Langston Hughes tends to have a theme of hope within his works‚ while Dr. Seuss tends to rhyme and have colorful children’s books. At the same time‚ they should also be able to compare and find similarities in different texts. Such as “Langston Hughes used to write poems which would occasionally have a rhyme scheme‚ while Dr. Seuss wrote children’s books which rhymed most of
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Salvation In “Salvation‚” Langston Hughes says that adults shouldn’t pressure children with unrealistic expectations because it will backfire‚ using narration and description modes to prove his point. Hughes narrates an autobiographical story about being a twelve year old‚ African-American boy‚ who is told about being saved and joins the rest of the children of the congregation to “see and hear Jesus.” He faces an external conflict between with the congregation of the church and his Auntie
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had ended years ago. Harlem became a neighborhood full of the African American community. Soon Harlem had a growing artistic‚ cultural‚ and social explosion of African American culture‚ this time period is now known as the Harlem Renaissance. Langston Hughes is one of the best know poets during the Harlem Renaissance. He wrote about how African Americans were segregated‚ treated unequally
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for people to be able to get an important point across. That could either be affected by social/political issues taking place at the time or their personal experiences. These events and experiences have led to the breakthrough of many texts. Langston Hughes‚ the author of poems‚ Mother to Son and Let America be America again captures the Harlem Renaissance period‚ which was a social and artistic revival of the African American community. His poems explore the themes of stereotyping and taking action
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Neither Langston Hughes nor Maya Angelou were just poets in the world of the twentieth century but instead heroes and leaders who showed the world that race wasn ’t what made you but whom you are instead. Though both grew up during times and events in the world‚ both have similar ideas while also different. Though both poets were put down by society‚ neither let what people said get to them. Both instead wrote poems about how what people say doesn ’t matter. Maya told those people that despite what
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Oxford English Dictionary Report: Negro OED report In 1940‚ Langston Hughes wrote: "The word [negro] to colored people of high and low degree is like a red rag to a bull. Used rightly or wrongly‚ ironically or seriously‚ of necessity for the sake of realism‚ or impishly for the sake of comedy‚ it doesn ’t matter. The word [negro]‚ you see‚ sums up for us who are colored all the bitter years of insult and struggle in America." When asked about the etymology of the word Negro most people
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Dreams “Hold fast to dreams/ For if dreams die /Life is a broken-winged bird/ That cannot fly.” There are many ways to interpret Langston Hughes in this poem‚ but it is clear that he is saying that we‚ as people‚ need dreams to keep on going. Throughout this unit‚ we have seen many different cases in which dreams can come true‚ even if not all of them do. While dreams can seem truly impossible to accomplish‚ they are worth pursuing because it gets through the days of hopelessness‚ there is lot to
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better. Pondering the future is not an unusual characteristic to have. It is natural to try to figure out what will happen to someone and why. This allows one to consider the realisticness of a dream and what will happen if it isn’t achieved. In Langston Hughes’ poem “Harlem”‚ the speaker wonders about his “deferred dreams”. He wants to know if not pursuing his dream will cause regret later in life‚ and I wonder that as well. I want to know what the consequences are for not reaching my goals in life
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