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E-book
Author Ostrom, Hans A.

Title Langston Hughes : a study of the short fiction / Hans Ostrom
Published New York : Twayne Publishers ; [1993]
New York : Maxwell Macmillan International, [1993]
©1993
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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 125 pages) : illustrations
Series Gale virtual reference library
Twayne's studies in short fiction ; no. 47
Gale virtual reference library.
Twayne's studies in short fiction ; no. 47
Contents Part 1. The short fiction: The ways of white folks -- Laughing to keep from crying -- The Jesse B. Simple stories and Something in common -- Character types and narrative modes -- Part 2. The writer -- Part 3. The critics: Alain Locke -- Arna Bontemps -- Carl Van Vechten -- Luther Jackson -- Melvin Tolson -- Arnold Rampersad -- Onwuchekwa Jemie -- R. Baxter Miller -- Arthur P. Davis -- Houston A. Baker, Jr. -- Steven C. Tracy -- Phyllis R. Klotman -- Susan Blake -- Edward Margolies -- James O. Young -- Mary Rohrberger -- Jeffrey Walker -- James Emanuel -- Hoyt Fuller -- Adam David Miller -- Amiri Baraka
Summary Perhaps the single best-known and most highly regarded African-American writer of his time, Langston Hughes (1902-1967) has left a profound mark on American letters. Taking the environment of urban blacks, Hughes captured in verse and prose its joys and pains, bringing a new realism to the subject. His language, while unadorned in style, remained spirited and true to colloquial speech, and his work was among the first by a black man to gain a multi-racial and national audience. Hughes is primarily remembered for his poetry, with which he established his reputation in the 1920s. He did not even publish his first collection of short fiction, The Ways of White Folks, until 1934. But precisely because it appeared after he had undergone an extensive process of artistic and personal development, it possesses an unusual coherence and power. It deals unflinchingly with racial, class, and sexual issues, as does his second collection, Laughing to Keep from Crying (1952). In 1950 a number of satirical sketches featuring Hughes's character Jesse B. Simple began appearing in collected form. These represent a tradition distinct from his other work. Hans Ostrom examines Hughes's short fiction canon in great detail, bringing in a wealth of information on Hughes's background and times to provide a fuller understanding. He discusses events such as the Harlem Renaissance and how they relate to Hughes, as well as sensitively examining the issue of race. Within a clear and coherent organizational scheme, Ostrom adds excerpts from interviews and letters and a section on the best previous scholarship and criticism. The result is a truly useful study
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 110-118) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967 -- Fictional works.
SUBJECT Hughes, Langston, 1902-1967. fast http://id.worldcat.org/fast/fst00049863
Hughes, Langston. swd
Subject African Americans in literature.
Fiction -- Technique.
Short story.
Verhalen.
African Americans in literature.
Criticism and interpretation.
Fiction -- Technique.
Kurzgeschichte
Short story.
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0805791930
9780805791938