Essay Topic Hub

Langston Hughes
Essays

128+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

128 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Langston Hughes was a central figure of the Harlem Renaissance and one of the most studied African American poets and writers in literary history. Students encounter his work across courses in American literature, African American studies, cultural history, and composition. His poetry and prose are academically compelling because they engage directly with questions of race, identity, democracy, and the lived experience of African Americans, making his writing a rich site for both close reading and broader cultural analysis. Works such as "The Weary Blues," "Democracy," and the autobiographical essay "Salvation" appear frequently in undergraduate curricula, giving students concrete texts to analyze in depth.

Papers on Hughes tend to fall into a few distinct approaches. Comparative essays are especially common, placing Hughes alongside figures such as Tennessee Williams or drawing connections between his work and W.E.B. Du Bois's theories of Black identity. Other papers focus on close reading and literary analysis of individual poems, examining how Hughes uses voice, form, and imagery to express the experiences of African Americans. Some essays use a single text, such as "The Weary Blues" or "Dinner Guest: Me," as a lens for exploring themes of racial inequality and cultural expression within the Harlem Renaissance more broadly.

A strong essay on Hughes begins with a specific, arguable thesis rather than a general statement about his importance. Evidence drawn directly from the poems or prose — specific lines, word choices, and structural decisions — carries the most weight. Historical and cultural context about the Harlem Renaissance can support the argument effectively, but the most common pitfall to avoid is letting that context overwhelm the actual textual analysis, which should remain the foundation of the essay.

Sort by:
Case Study Undergraduate
The Russian Empire Through the Eyes of the West
Fellowship Proposal: Russian Studies, Sovietology, and Orientalism
Essay Doctorate
City and the Country: Oz and Trading Places
The Wizard of Oz provides Americans with a text that helps them make the transition from the country to the city and sets the stage for the commodified American popular culture of the 20th century.
Paper Undergraduate
Using Sociology, Analyzing Web DuBois and His Founding the NAACP
¶ … scholar of black life in America," W.E.B. DuBois taught and practiced sociology and became one of the co-founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).
Research Paper Undergraduate
Glory Road: Conflict, Communications and Culture
The 2006 American film drama "Glory Road" is a useful way of appreciating the notion, familiar to students of communications, of what constitutes a culture. There are two particular theses from the study of…
Paper High School
"Mulatto" and the Myth of the Tragic Half-Breed
¶ … Mulatto" by Langston Hughes is that the figure of the tragic mulatto highlights the contradictions of white society in his presence and person: both during the era in which the poem is set and also during the Harlem…
Paper Undergraduate
Honest Stu and Angry Andy: character study and conflict dynamics
African-Americans: Harlem Renaissance and the Black Power Movement
Paper Masters
Speech to the Young Speech to the Progress Toward
"even if you are not ready for day it cannot always be night."
Research Paper Doctorate
African-American History Sharecropping Was Not
Sharecropping was not a direct effort by whites to keep blacks in a submissive position, but rather was a phenomenon that developed after the Civil War as the South tried to rebuild its economy (Riddle 1995).
Paper Undergraduate
Value of Literature Must Apply
Why Read Literature? "The value of literature must apply to all human beings alike, not to some group…Men [and presumably women too] ought to value literature for being what it is; they ought to value it in terms and in degrees of its literary value…" (Draughon, Earl Wells, 2003, p. 114). Literature is available to the literate person for many reasons. For one reason and purpose, literature is entertaining and provides for the reader a fascinating excursion anywhere in the world – or the universe – without the reader having to leave his or her comfortable chair. But there are many other reasons why literature should be read, and those will be presented in this paper.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ethnicity and Race Race, Class,
The Harlem Renaissance today is famed as an age of artistic ferment, an age that gave birth to the career of Paul Robeson and the Cotton Club. It was also an age of political challenges to an American political and…