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NEW RELEASE New Release of Hughes' Book, Let America Be America Again FICTION The Best of Simple. Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1988. Laughing to Keep from Crying. New York: Holt, 1952; Mattituck, NY: Aeonian Press, 1976. Laughing to Keep From Crying and 25 Jesse Semple Stories. Franklin Center, Pa.: Franklin Library, 1981. Not Without Laughter. New York: Alfred. A. Knopf, 1930; New York: Collier, 1979; New York: Scribner Paperback Fiction, 1995. with Arna Bontemps. Popo and Fifina. Illus. Simms Campbell. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. The Return of Simple. Ed. Akiba Sullivan Harper. New York: Hill and Wang, 1994. Short Stories. Ed. Akiba Sullivan Harper. New York: Hill and Wang, 1996. The Simple Omnibus. Mattituck, N.Y.: Aeonian Press, 1978, 1961. Simple Speaks His Mind. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1950; Mattituck, N.Y.: Aeonian Press, 1976. Simple Stakes a Claim. New York: Rineheart, 1957. Simple Takes a Wife. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1953. Simple's Uncle Sam. New York: Hill and Wang, 1967, 1965; New York: Hill and Wang, 1977. Something in Common and Other Stories. New York: Hill and Wang, 1963. Tambourines to Glory: A Novel. New York: Hill and Wang, 1958; New York: Hill and Wang, 1970. The Ways of White Folks. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1934; New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969; New York: Vintage, 1971. POETRY The Backlash Blues. Detroit: Broadside Press, 1967. Black Misery. Illus. Arouni. New York: Paul Eriksson, 1969. The Collected Poems of Langston Hughes. Ed. Arnold Rampersad. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1994. The Dream Keeper and Other Poems. Illus. Helen Sewell. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1932, 1986. Fields of Wonder. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1947. Fine Clothes to the Jew. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1927. Freedom's Plow. New York: Musette Publishers, 1943. Jim Crow's Last Stand. New York: Negro Publication Society of America, 1943. The Langston Hughes Reader. New York; G. Brazilier, 1958, 1971. Montage of a Dream Deferred. New York: Henry Holt, 1951. One-way Ticket. Illus. Jacob Lawrence. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1949, 1948. The Panther and the Lash: Poems of Our Times. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969. with Arna Bontemps. The Pasteboard Bandit. Illus. Peggy Turley. New York: Oxford University Press, 1997. Scottsboro Limited: Four Poems and a Play in Verse. Illus. Prentiss Taylor. New York: Golden Stair Press, 1932. Selected Poems of Langston Hughes. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1959; New York: Vintage, 1974, 1990. Shakespeare in Harlem. Illus. E. McKnight Kauffer. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1942. The Weary Blues. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1926. NONFICTION Arna Bontemps–Langston Hughes Letters, 1925-1967. Ed. Charles H. Nichols. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1980. with Milton Meltzer. Black Magic: A Pictorial History of the African-American in the Performing Arts. New York: Da Capo Press, 1990. Fight for Freedom: The Story of the NAACP. New York: Norton, 1962. The First Book of Africa. New York: Franklin Watts, 1960. with Milton Meltzer and C. Eric Lincoln. A Pictorial History of the Negro in America. 5th rev. ed. New York: Crown, 1983. with Roy De Carava. The Sweet Flypaper of Life. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1955.; New York: Hill and Wang, 1955, 1967. EDITED WORKS The Best Short Stories by Black Writers: The Classic Anthology from 1899 to 1967. Boston: Little, Brown, 1969. The Best Short Stories by Negro Writers: An Anthology from 1899 to the Present. Boston: Little, Brown, 1967. The Book of Negro Folklore. With Arna Bontemps. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1958. The Book of Negro Humor. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1966. Famous American Negroes. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1954. Famous Negro Heroes of America. Illus. Gerald McCann. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1958. Famous Negro Music Makers. New York: Dodd, Mead, 1955. The New Negro Poets U.S.A. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1964. Poems from Black Africa: Ethiopia, South Rhodesia, Sierra Leone, Madagascar, Ivory Coast, Nigeria, Kenya, Gabon, Senegal, Nyasaland, Mozambique, South Africa, Congo, Ghana, Liberia. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press, 1963. The Poetry of the Negro, 1746-1970. With Arna Bontemps. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1949; Rev ed. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1970. TRANSLATIONS Cuba Libre, Poems By Nicolas Guillen; Trans. Langston Hughes and Ben Frederic Carruther; illus. Gar Gilbert. Los Angeles: Anderson & Ritchie, 1948. La Poesie negro-americaine. Ed. and trans. Langston Hughes. Paris: Seghers, 1966. Masters of the Dew. By Jacques Rouman. Trans. Langston Hughes and Mercer Cook. New York: Reynal & Hitchcock, 1947. JUVENILE LITERATURE The Book of Rhythms. Illus. Matthew Wawiorka. Rev. ed. of The First Book of Rhythms. Oxford University Press, 1995. Carol of the Brown King: Nativity Poems. Illus. Ashley Bryan. New York: Atheneum Books, 1998. Don't You Turn Back: Poems. Comp. Lee Bennett Hopkins. Illus. Ann Grifalconi. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969. The First Book of Jazz. Illus. Cliff Roberts. Music comp. David Martin. New York: Franklin Watts, 1955. The First Book of Jazz. Illus. Cliff Roberts. Ecco Press, 1995; Paperback ed. Ecco Press, 1997. The First Book of Negroes. Pictures by Ursula Koering. New York: Franklin Watts, 1952. The First Book of Rhythms. Pictures by Robin King [pseud.]. [pseud.] New York: Franklin Watts, 1954. The First Book of the West Indies. Pictures by Robert Bruce. New York: Franklin Watts, 1956. Jazz. Updated and expanded by Sandford Brown. 3rd ed. New York: Franklin Watts, 1982. The Sweet and Sour Animal Book. Illus. by students of the Harlem School of the Arts. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. OPERAS/DRAMA Five Plays. Ed. Webster Smalley. Indiana University Press, 1963. Gospel Glory: A passion play. The Author, 1962. with Louis Davis. Limitations of Life. Skits and Sketches. New York: New Theatre League, 1939. New York: New Theatre League, 1932. with Zora Neale Hurston. Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life. Ed. George Houston Bass and Henry Louis Gates, Jr. New York: HarperPerennial, 1991. The Negro Mother, and Other Dramatic Recitations. With decorations by Prentiss Taylor. New York: Golden Stair Press, 1931; Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, 1971; Salem, NH: Ayer, Co., 1987. Three Negro Plays. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1969. AUTOBIOGRAPHY/BIOGRAPHY I Wonder as I Wander: An Autobiographical Journey. New York: Rineheart, 1956; New York: Hill and Wang, 1964; New York: Thunder's Mouth Press, dist. by Persea Books, 1986. OTHER Barksdale, Richard. Langston Hughes: The Poet and His Critics. Chicago: American Library Association, 1998 [1977]. Bernard, Emily. Remember Me to Harlem: The Letters of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, 1925-1964. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2001. Berry, Faith. Langston Hughes: Before and Beyond Harlem. Westport, Conn.: Lawrence Hill, 1983. Bloom, Harold, ed. Langston Hughes. New York: Chelsea House, 1989. Bonner, Pat E. Sassy Jazz and Slo' Draggin' Blues: Music in the Poetry of Langston Hughes. New York: P. Lang, 1996. Cobb, Martha. Harlem, Haiti, and Havana: A Comparative Critical Study of Langston Hughes, Jaques Romain, Nicolas Guillen. Washington, D.C.: Three Continents Press, 1979. Dace, Tish. Langston Hughes: The Contemporary Reviews. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1997. De Santis, Christopher. Langston Hughes and the Chicago Defender: Essays on Race, Politics, and Culture,1942-1962. Champaign-Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1995. Dodat, Francis. Langston Hughes. Paris: Seghers, 1964. Duffy, Susan, ed. The Political Plays of Langston Hughes. Carbondale, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press, 2000. Emmanuel, James A. Langston Hughes. New York: Twayne's United States Authors Series, 1967. Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. and K. A. Appiah. Langston Hughes: Critical Perspectives Past and Present. New York: Amistad. dist by Penguin USA, 1993. Gibson, Donald B. Five Black Writers: Essays on Wright, Ellison, Baldwin, Hughes and Le Roi Jones. New York: New York University Press, 1970. Grigsby, Russell. Good Morning Revolution: A Tribute to Langston Hughes. Harper, Donna S. Not So Simple: The "Simple" Stories by Langston Hughes. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 1995. Haskins, James Always Movin' On: The Life of Langston Hughes. Trenton, N.J.: Africa World Press, 1993. Jemie, Onwuchekwa. Langston Hughes: An Introduction to Poetry. New York: Columbia University Press, 1976. Larson, Norita D. Langston Hughes, Poet of Harlem. Mankato, Minn.: Creative Education, 1981.
Lown, Fredric. Langston Hughes: An Interdisciplinary Biography. J. Weston Walch, 1997. McLaren, Joseph. Form and Feeling: The Critical Reception of Edward Kennedy, Duke Ellington, and Langston Hughes 1920-1966. McLaren, Joseph. Langston Hughes: Folk Dramatist in the Protest Tradition, 1921-1943. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1997. Miller, R. Baxter. The Art and Imagination of Langston Hughes. Lexington, Ky: University Press of Kentucky, 1989. Miller, R. Baxter, ed. Black American Literature Forum. Special Langston Hughes Issue. 15 (fall 1981). Mullen, Edward J. Critical Essays on Langston Hughes. Boston, Mass.: G. K. Hall, 1986. Mullen, Edward J., ed. Langston Hughes in the Hispanic World and Haiti. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1977. Nazel, Joe. Langston Hughes. Los Angeles, Calif.: Melrose Square Pub., 1994. Neilson, Kenneth P. To Langston Hughes, with Love. Hollis, N.Y.: All Seasons Art, 1996. Neilson, Kennneth P. The World of Langston Hughes Music. Hollis, N.Y.: All Seasons Art, 1982. Ostrom, Hans. Langston Hughes: A Study of the Short Fiction. New York: Twayne, 1993. O'Daniel, Therman B. Langston Hughes: Black Genius: A Critical Evaluation. For the College Language Association. New York: Morrow, 1971. Rampersad, Arnold. The Life of Langston Hughes, Volume 1: 1902-1940: I, Too, Sing America. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. Rampersad, Arnold. The Life of Langston Hughes, Volume 2: 1941-1967: I Dream A World. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. Rummel, Jack. Langston Hughes. With an introductory essay by Coretta Scott King. New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1988. Sorenson, Margo. Shatter with Words: Langston Hughes. Perfection Learning Company, 1998. Tracy, Steven C. Langston Hughes and the Blues. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1988. Trotman, C. James, ed. Langston Hughes: The Man, His Art and His Continuing Influence. New York: Garland, 1995. Bloom, Harold. Langston Hughes: Comprehensive Research and Study Guide. Broomall, Pa.: Chelsea House, 1998. Dickinson, Donald C. A Bio-Bibliography of Langston Hughes, 1902-1967. 2nd rev. ed. Hamden, Conn.: Archon Books, 1972. Dickinson, Donald C. "Remembering Langston Hughes: –Langston Hughes –A Bibliographical Reminiscence'." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 44-46. Etheridge, Sharynn O. "Langston Hughes: An Annotated Bibliography (1977-1986)," The Langston Hughes Review 11,1 (spring 1992): 41-. Inge, M. Thomas; Maurice Duke; and Jackson R. Bryer. Black American Writers: Bibliographical Essays, I: The Beginnings through the Harlem Renaissance and Langston Hughes. New York: St. Martin's, 1978. Kaiser, Ernest. "Selected Bibliography of the Published Writings of Langston Hughes," Freedomways, 8, 185-191. Mandelik, Peter. A Concordance to the Poetry of Langston Hughes. Detroit: Gale Research, 1975. Mikolyzk, Thomas A. Langston Hughes: A Bio-Bibliography. New York: Greenwood Press, 1990. Miller, R. Baxter. Langston Hughes and Gwendolyn Brooks: A Reference Guide. Boston: G. K. Hall, c 1978. O'Daniel, Therman. "Langston Hughes: A Selected Classified Bibliography." CLA Journal 11 349-366. O'Daniel, Therman. "Langston Hughes: An Updated Bibliography." Black American Literature Forum 15:3 (fall 1981): 104-107. Ostrom, Hans A. A Langston Hughes Encyclopedia. Greenwood Pub. Group. Vassilowitch, John Jr. "An Addendum to the Hughes Secondary Bibliography." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1982): 33. JUVENILE LITERATURE Rollins, Charlemae H. Black Troubador: Langston Hughes. Chicago: Rand McNally, 1970. BIOGRAPHY/JUVENILE Cooper, Floyd. Coming Home: From the Life of Langston Hughes. New York: Philomel Books, 1994. Dunham, Montrew. Langston Hughes: Young Black Poet. Illus. Robert Doremus. New York: Aladdin Paperbacks, 1995. Hill, Christine M. Langston Hughes: Poet of the Harlem Renaissance. Springfield, N.J.: Enslow, 1997. McKissack, Pat, and Frederick McKissack. Langston Hughes: Great American Poet. Hillside, N.J.: Enslow Pub., 1992. Meltzer, Milton. Langston Hughes: A Biography. New York: Crowell, 1968. Meltzer, Milton. Langston Hughes. An illustrated edition by Milton Meltzer. Illus. Stephen Alcorn. Brookfield, Conn.: Millbrook Press, 1997. Myers, Elisabeth P. Langston Hughes: Poet of His People. Illus. Russell Hoover. New York: Dell, 1981, 1970. Osofsky, Audrey. Free to Dream: The Making of A Poet. New York: Lothrop, Lee and Shepard, 1996. Walker, Alice. Langston Hughes, American Poet. Juvenile ed. by Alice Walker. Illus. Don Miller. New York: Crowell, 1974. Walker, Alice. Langston Hughes, American Poet. New York: HarperCollins, 1998. Ako, Edward O. "Langston Hughes and the Negritude Movement: A Study in Literary Influences." College Language Association Journal 28 (Sept. 1984): 46-56. Arvey, Verna. "Langston Hughes, Crusader." Opportunity 17, 363-364. Asgill, Eddie Omotayo. "Langston Hughes and Africa." In Of Dreams Deferred, Dead or Alive: African Perspectives on African-American Writers, ed. Ade Femi Ojo. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1996. Barksdale, Richard K. "A Chat with Langston Hughes: Spring 1960." The Langston Hughes Review 2,2 (fall 1983): 25-26. Barksdale, Richard K. "Comic Relief in Langston Hughes' Poerty," Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981): 108-111. Barksdale, Richard K. "Langston Hughes: His Time and His Humanistic Techniques." In Black American Literature and Humanism, ed. R. Baxter Miller. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1981. Barrett, Linden. "The Gaze of Langston Hughes: Subjectivity, Homoeroticism, and the Feminine in the Big Sea." Yale Journal of Criticism: Interpretation in the Humanities 12,2 (fall 1999): 383-97. Bass, George Houston. "Five Stories about a Man Named Hughes: A Critical Reflection." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1982): 1-12. Beavers, Herman. "Dead Rocks and Sleeping Men: Aurality in the Aesthetic Language of Langston Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1992): 1-5. Bennett, Juda. "Multiple Passings and the Double Death of Langston Hughes," Biography 23 (4) (Fall 2000), 670-93. Berry, Faith. "Did Van Vechten Make or Take Hughes' Blues?" Black World 25 (February 1976): 22-28. Berry, Faith. "The Universality of Langston Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review 1,2 (fall 1982): 1-10. Berry, Faith. "Voice for the Jazz Age, Great Migration or Black Bourgeoisie." Black World 20 (November 1971): 10-16. Bethune, Brian D. "Langston Hughes' Lost Translation of Federico Garcia Lorca's Blood Wedding." Langston Hughes Review (spring 1997): 24-36. Beyer, William C. "A Certain Kind of Aesthete: Langston Hughes; Shakespeare in Harlem." In A Humanist's Legacy: Essays in Honor of John Christian Bale, ed. Dennis M. Jones. Decorah, Iowa: Beyer, William. "Langston Hughes and Common Ground in the 1940s." American Studies in Scandinavia, Copenhagen, Denmark (1991): 29-42. Bienvenu, Germain J. "Intracaste Prejudice in Langston Hughes's 'Mulatto.'" African American Review 26,2 (summer 1992): 341-54. Blake, Susan L. "Old John in Harlem: The Urban Folktales of Langston Hughes." Black American Literature Forum (1980): 100-104. Bogumil, Mary L., and Michael R. Molino. "Pretext, Context, Subtext: Textual Power in the Writing of Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, and Martin Luther King Jr." College English 52,7 (November 1990): 800-812. Bonner, Patricia E. "Cryin' the Jazzy Blues and Livin' Blue Jazz: Analyzing the Blues and Jazz Poetry of Langston Hughes." West Georgia College Review (May 1990): 15-28. Bonner, Patricia. "Hughes's'Beale Street Love.'" Explicator (winter 1999): 108-110. Bontemps, Arna. "Langston Hughes: He Spoke of Rivers." Freedomways 8, 140-143. Borden, Anne. "Heroic 'Hussies' and 'Brilliant Queers': Genderracial Resistance in the Works of Langston Hughes." African American Review (fall 1994): 333-345. Brown, Lloyd W. "The American Dream and the Legacy of Revolution in the Poetry of Langston Hughes." Studies in Black Literature 7 (spring 1976): 16-18. Brown, Lloyd W. "The Portrait of the Artist as a Black American in the Poetry of Langston Hughes." Studies in Black Literature 5 (winter 1974): 24-27. Bruck, Peter. "Langston Hughes: 'The Blues I'm Playing'" (1934). In The Black American Short Story in the 20thCentury: A Collection of Critical Essays, ed. Peter Bruck. Amsterdam: Gruner, 1977. Carmen, Y. "Langston Hughes, Poet of the People." International Literature, 1939. 1, 192-194. Chinitz, David. "Literacy and Authenticity: the Blues Poems of Langston Hughes." Callaloo 19,1 (winter 1996): 177-194. Chinitz, David. "Rejuvenation through Joy: Langston Hughes, Primitivism and Jazz," American Literary History 9,1 (spring 1997): 60-78. Chrisman, Robert. "Nicolas Guillen, Langston Hughes, and the Black American/Afro-Cuban Connection." Michigan Quarterly Review (fall 1994): 807-820. Clarke, John Hendrick. "Langston Hughes and Jesse B. Semple." Freedomways 8 167-169. Clark, VeVe. "Restaging Langston Hughes' Scotsboro Limited." In Conversations with Amiri Baraka. ed. Charlie Reilly. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1994. Cobb, Martha. "Langston Hughes: The Writer, His Poetics and the Artistic Process." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1983): 1-5. Culp, Mary Beth. "Religion in the Poetry of Langston Hughes." Phylon: A Review of Race and Culture (fall 1987): 240-245. Dawahare, Anthony. "Langston Hughes' Radical Poetry and the End of Race." MELUS 23,3 (fall 1998): 21-48. Dandridge, Rita B. "The Black Woman as a Freedom Fighter in Langston Hughes' Simple's Uncle Sam." College Language Association Journal (1974): 273-283. Davis, Arthur P. "The Harlem of Langston Hughes' Poetry." Phylon 13 276-283. Davis, Arthur P. "Jesse B. Semple: Negro American." Phylon 15 21-28. Davis, Arthur P. "Langston Hughes; Cool Poet." CLA Journal 11 280-296. Davis, Arthur P. " The Tragic Mulatto Theme in Six Works of Langston Hughes." Phylon 16 195-204. Davis, Thadious M. "Reading the Woman's Face in Langston Hughes's and Roy de Carava's Sweet Flypaper of Life." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1993): 22-28. DeSantis, Christopher. "Rage, Repudiation, and Endurance: Langston Hughes's Radical Writings." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1993): 31-39. Diawara, Manthia. "The Absent One: The Avant-Garde and the Black Imaginary in 'Looking for Langston.'" In Representing Black Men, edited by Marcellus Blount and George P. Cunningham. New York, N.Y.: Routledge, 1996. Diaz-Diocaretz, Myriam. "Society (Pro)poses, and Madam (Dis)poses." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 20-27. Dixon, Melvin. "Rivers Remembering Their Source: Comparative Studies in Black Literary History–Langston Hughes, Jaques Romain, and Negritude." In Afro-American Literature: The Reconstruction of Instruction, ed. Dexter Fisher and Robert B. Stepto. New York: MLA, 1979. Dubbe, P. D. "American and Indian Society in Langston Hughes and Narayan Surve." In Indian Views on American Literature, ed. Desai A. A. Mutalik. New Delhi, India: Prestige, 1998. Eggers, Paul. "An (Other) Wat to Mean: A Lacanian Reading of Langston Hughes' Montage of a Dream Deferred." Studies in the Humanities 27,1 (June 2000): 20-34. Emanuel, James A. "Langston Hughes' First Short Story: 'Mary Winosky.'" Phylon 22, 267-272. Emanuel, James A. "The Literary Experiments of Langston Hughes," CLA Journal 11, 335-344. Ensslen, Klaus. "Plain Living and Plain Talk in Langston Hughes' 'Mother to Son': A Poetics of the Black Folk Voice." Anglistik and Englischunterricht (1994): 87-96. Evans, Nicholas M. "Langston Hughes as Bop Ethnographer in 'Trumpet Player: 52nd Street.'" Library Chronicle of the University of Texas (1994): 118-135. Fabre, Michel. "Hughes's Literary Reputation in France." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 20-27. Farrell, Walter C., and Patricia A. Johnson. "Poetic Interpretations of Urban Black Folk Culture: Langston Hughes and the 'Be-bop' Era." The Journal of the Society for the Study of the Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States 8,3 (fall 1981): 57-72. Farrison, Edward W. "Langston Hughes: Poet of the Negro Renaissance." College Language Association Journal (1972): 15, 401-410. Ferrell, Tracy J. Prince. "'Theme for English B' and the Dreams of Langston Hughes." English Review (Sept. 1995): 36-37. Filatova, Lydia. "Langston Hughes: American Writer." International Literature, no. 2 (1933): 103-105. Ford, Karen Jackson. "Do Right to Write Right: Langston Hughes' Aesthetics of Simplicity." Twentieth Century Literature 38,4 (winter 1992): 436-57. Fowler, Carolyn. "The Shared Vision of Langston Hughes and Jaques Romain." Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981): 84-88. Franke, Thomas L. "The Art of Verbal Performance: A Stylistic Analysis of Langston Hughes's 'Feet Live Their Own Life.'" Language and Style: An International Journal (fall 1986): 377-387. Garner, Thurmon, and Carolyn Calloway-Thomas. "Langston Hughes' Message for the Black Masses." Communication Quarterly 39,2 (spring 1991): 164-178. Gates, Henry Louis, Jr. "The Hungry Icon: Langston Hughes Rides a Blue Note." Village Voice Literary Supplement (July 1989): 8-13. Giles, Freda Scott. "Tributes: Remembering Langston Hughes on the Thirtieth Anniversary of His Death (1 February 1902–22 May 1967)" Langston Hughes Review (spring 1997): iv-vi. Graham, Maryemma. "The Practice of a Social Art." In Critical Perspectives Past and Present, ed. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and K. A. Appiah. New York: Amistad, 1993. Greene, Gita. "Remembering Langston Hughes: 'Langston Understood.'" The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1986): 41-43. Guillaume, Alfred J. Jr. "And Bid Him Translate: Langston Hughes' Translations of Poetry from French." Langston Hughes Review (fall 1985): 1-23. Hansell, William H. "Black Music in the Poetry of Langston Hughes: Roots, Race, Release." Obsidian 4 (winter 1978): 16-38. Hansen, Tom. "Hughes's Harlem." Explicator 52,2 (winter 1997): 106-107. Harper, Donna Akiba Sullivan. "'The Apple of His Eye': Du Bois on Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1986): 29-33. Hernton, Calvin. "The Poetic Consciousness of Langston Hughes from Affirmation to Revolution." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1993): 2-9. Hill-Lubin, Mildred A. "The African American Grandmother in Autobiographical Works by Frederick Douglass, Langston Hughes, and Maya Angelou." International Journal of Aging and Human Development 33,3 (October 1991): 173-186. Hodges, Carolyn E. "Introduction: Reflections on the Art of Literary Translation and the Legacy of Langston Hughes." Langston Hughes Review (fall 1985): vi-ix. Hodges, Carolyn R. "Langston Hughes and the African Diaspora in German." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1986): 18-22. Hoilman, Dona. "A Red Southwestern House for a Black Midwestern Poet." Concerning Poetry (1980): 55-61. Hokanson, Robert O'Brien. "Jazzing It Up: The Be-Bop Modernism of Langston Hughes." Mosaic 31,4 (December 1998): 61-82. Holmes, Eugene C. "Langston Hughes: Philosopher Poet." Freedomways 8 144-151. Hudson, Theodore R. "The Duke and the Laureate: Loose Connections." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1992): 28-35. Hudson, Theodore. "Langston Hughes's Last Volume of Verse." CLA Journal 11 345-148. Hudson, Theodore. "Technical Aspects of the Poetry of Langston Hughes." Black World 22 (September 1973): 24-45. Jackson, Blyden. "Claude McKay and Langston Hughes: The Harlem Renaissance and More." Pembroke Magazine 6 (1975): 43-48. Jackson, Blyden. "A Word About Simple." CLA Journal 11 310-318. Jackson, Richard. "The Shared Vision of Langston Hughes and Black Hispanic Writers." Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981): 89-92. Jarraway, David R. "Montage of an Otherness Deferred: Dreaming Subjectivity in Langston Hughes." American Literature 68,4 (December 1996): 819-838. Joans, Ted. "A Memoir: The Langston Hughes I Knew." Black World (1972): 14-18. Johnson, Eloise McKinney. "Langston Hughes and Mary McLeod Bethune." The Langston Hughes Review 2,1 (spring 1983): 1-12. Johnson, Patricia, and Walter Farrell. "How Langston Hughes Used the Blues." Melus 6 (spring 1979): 55-63. Jones, Eldred. "Laughing to Keep from Crying: A Tribute to Langston Hughes." Presence Africaine 64 51-55. Jones, Harry L. "A Danish Tribute to Langston Hughes." CLA Journal 11, 331-334. Jones, Harry. "Simple Speaks Dutch." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1985): 24-26. Jordan, Millicent Dobbs. "Personal Reminiscences of Langston Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review 1,2 (fall 1982): 12. Kearney, Reginald. "Langston Hughes in Japanese Translation." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1985): 27-29. Kellner, Bruce. "Langston Hughes's Nigger Heaven Blues." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1992): 21-27. King, Woodie Jr. "Remembering Langston: A Poet of the Black Theater." Negro Digest (1969): 27-32, 9596. Klotman, Phyllis R. "Jesse B. Semple and the Narrative Art of Langston Hughes." Journal of Narrative Technique (1973): 66-75. Koprince, Susan. "Moon Imagery in The Ways of White Folks." The Langston Hughes Review 1,1 (spring 1982): 14-17. Kornweibel, Theodore Jr. "The Most Dangerous of All Negro Journals: Federal Efforts to Suppress the Chicago Defender During World War I." American Journalism 11,2 (1994): 154-168. Kramer, Aaron. "Robert Burns and Langston Hughes." Freedomways 8 159-166. Larkin, Margaret. "A Poet for the People." Opportunity 5 84-85. Lee, Brian. "'Who's Passing for Who?' in the Fiction of Langston Hughes." In Black Fiction: New Studies in the Afro-American Novel since 1945, ed. A. Robert Lee. New York: Barnes and Noble, 1980. Lewis, Randolph. "Langston Hughes and Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1925-1935." Library Chronicle of the University of Texas (1992): 52-63. Lowe, John. "Newsprint Masks: The Comic Columns of Finley Peter Dunne, Alexander Posey, and Langston Hughes." In Beyond the Binary: Reconstructing Cultural Identity in a Multi-Cultural Context, ed. Timothy B. Powell. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers UP, 1999. Lubin, Maurice A., and Faith Berry, trans. "Langston Hughes and Haiti." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 4-7. MacLeod, Norman. "The Poetry and Argument of Langston Hughes." Crisis 45 358-369. Martin, Dellita L. "Langston Hughes's Use of the Blues." CLA Journal 22 (December 1978): 151-159. Martin, Dellite L. "The 'Madam Poems' as Dramatic Monologue." Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981): 97-99. Martin Ogunsola, Dellita L. "Langston Hughes and the Musico-Poetry of the African Diaspora." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1986): 1-17. Matheus, John F. "Langston Hughes as Translator." CLA 11, 319-330. McLaren, Joseph. "Early Recognitions: Duke Ellington and Langston Hughes in New York, 1920-1930." In The Harlem Renaissance: Revaluations, ed. Amritjit Singh, William S. Shiver, and Stanley Brodwin. New York: Garland, 1989. McLaren, Joseph. "From Protest to Soul Fest: Langston Hughes' Gospel Plays." Langston Hughes Review (spring 1997): 37-48. McMurray, David Arthur. " Two Black Men in the New World: Notes on the 'Americanism' of Langston Hughes and the Cubania of Nicholas Guillen" in Proceedings of the 7th Congress of the International Comparative Literature Association, ed. Milan V. Dimic, Juan Ferrate, Eva Kushner, Marcel Batallion. Stuttgart: Bieber, 1979. Meltzer, Milton. "Harlem Poet. Langston Hughes Comes to Harlem." Cobblestone 12,2 (February 1991): 10. Miller, R. Baxter. "'Done Made Us Leave Our Home': Langston Hughes's Not without Laughter 'Unifying Image and Three Dimensions.'" Phylon: The Atlanta University Review of Race and Culture (1976): 362-69. Miller, R. Baxter. "'For a Moment I Wondered': Theory and Symbolic Form in the Autobiographies of Langston Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review (Fall 1984): 1-6. Miller, R. Baxter, ed. "Framing and Framed Languages in Hughes' 'Ask Your Mama: 12 Moods for Jazz.'" Melus 17,4 (winter 1991): 3-14. Miller, R. Baxter. "Langston Hughes and the 1980s: Rehumanization of Theory." Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981) Miller, R. Baxter, ed. "'No Crystal Stair': Unity, Archetype and Symbol in Langston Hughes' Poems on Women." Negro American Literature Forum 9 (winter 1975): 109-114. Mintz, Lawrence E. "Langston Hughes's Jesse B. Simple: The Urban Negro as Wise Fool." Satire Newsletter (1969): 11-21. Morejon, Nancy, and Victor Carrabino, trans. "A Cuban Perspective: The America of Langston Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 1-3. Moses, Wilson Jeremiah. "More Stately Mansions: New Negro Movements and Langston Hughes' Literary Theory." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1985): 40-46. Neal, Larry. "Langston Hughes: Black America's Poet Laureate." In American Writing Today, ed. Richard Kostelanetz. Troy, N.Y.: Whitston, 1991. Nero, Charles I. "Re/Membering Langston: Homphobic Textuality and Arnold Rampersad's Life of Langston Hughes." In Queer Representations: Reading Lives, Reading Cultures, ed. by Martin Duberman. New York, N.Y.: New York University Press, 1997. Nifong, David Michael. " Narrative Technique and Theory in The Ways of White Folks." Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981): 93-96. Ogunyemi, C. O. " In Praise of Things Black: Langston Hughes and Okot p'Bitek." Contemporary Poetry: A Journal of Criticism 4,1 (1981): 19-39. O'Daniel, Therman. "Lincoln's Man of Letters." Lincoln University Bulletin 67 9-12. Parker, John W. "Tomorrow in the Writing of Langston Hughes." College English 5 438-441. Patterson, Lindsay. "Langston Hughes: An Inspirer of Young Writers." Freedomways 8. Patterson, Louise Thompson. "With Langston Hughes in the U.S.S.R." Freedomways 8 152-158. Pemberton, Gayle. "Another 'Theme for English B.'" In The Ethnic Moment: The Search for Quality in the American Experience, ed. Philip L. Fetzer. Armonk, N.Y.: Sharpe, 1997. Peterkin, Julia. "Negro Blue and Gold." Poetry 31, 44-47. Peters, Erskine. "Rhythmic Manipulation and Instrument Simulation in Montage of a Dream Deferred." The Literary Griot: International Journal of Black Expressive Cultural Studies (spring 1993): 33-49. Piedra, Jose. "Through Blues." In Do the Americas Have a Common Literature?, ed. Gustavo Perez Firmat. Durham, N. C.: Duke University, 1990. Presley, James. "The American Dream of Langston Hughes." Southwest Review 48 380-386. Presley, James. "The Birth of Jesse B. Semple." Southwest Review 58,3 (1973): 219-224. Presley, James. "Langston Hughes, War Correspondent." Journal of Modern Literature (1976): 481-91. Rampersad, Arnold. "Future Scholarly Projects on Langston Hughes." Black American Literature Forum (fall 1987): 305-316. Rampersad, Arnold. "Langston Hughes and Approaches to Modernism in the Harlem Renaissance." In The Harlem Renaissance: Revaluations, ed. by Amritjit Singh, William S. Shiver, and Stanley Brodwin. New York: Garland, 1989. Rampersad, Arnold. "Langston Hughes and His Critics on the Left." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1986): 34-40. Rampersad, Arnold. "Langston Hughes Fine Clothes to the Jew." Callaloo: A Journal of African American and African Arts and Letters (winter 1986): 144-157. Rampersad, Arnold. "Langston Hughes: The Undergrad Years." Humanities 13,1 (January 1992): 20- Rampersad, Arnold. "The Origins of Poetry in Langston Hughes." The Southern Review (summer 1985): 695-705. Reid, Margaret A. "Langston Hughes: Rhetoric and Protest." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1984): 13-20. Reini-Grandell, Lynette, "Langston Hughes's Invocation of the Blues and Jazz Tradition under the Double Edged Sword of Primitivism." West Virginia University Philological Papers (1992): 113-23. Ricks, Sybil Ray. "A Textual Comparison of Langston Hughes' Mulatto, 'Father and Son,' and 'The Barrier,'" Black American Literature Forum 15,3 (fall 1981): 101-103. Rive, Richard. "Taos in Harlem: An Interview with Langston Hughes." Contrast 14 33-39. Rosenberg, Rachel A. "Looking for Zora's Mule Bone: The Battle for Artistic Authority in the Hurston-Hughes Collagoration." Modernism-Modernity 6,2 (April 1999): 79-105. Rubeo, Ugo. "Langston Hughes's Critical Recognition in Italy." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 13-19. Sanders, Leslie Catherine. "'Also Own the Theatre': Representation in the Comedies of Langston Hughes," The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1992): 6-13. Sanders, Leslie. "'Interesting Ways of Staging Plays': Hughes and Russian Theatre." Langston Hughes Review (spring 1997): 4-12. Sanders, Leslie C. "'I've Wrestled With Them All My Life': Langston Hughes's Tambourines to Glory." BALF 25,1 (spring 1991): 63-73. Scharnhorst, Gary F. "Hughes' 'Theme for English B.'" Explicator (1973): Item 27. Schatt, Stanley. "Langston Hughes: The Minstrel as Artificer," Journal of Modern Literature (1974): 115-20. Scott, Mark. "Langston Hughes of Kansas." Journal of Negro History 66,1 (spring 1981): 1-9. Scrimgeour, J. D. "Casting the Nets: Audience and Selfhood in Langston Hughes's The Big Sea." A-B: Auto-Biography Studies. (spring 1998): 97-115. Sekoni, Ropo. "Africans and Postmodernist Imagination in the Popular Fiction of Langston Hughes." In Langston Hughes: The Man, His Art, and His Continuing Influence, ed. James C. Trotman. New York: Garland, 1995. Shields, John P. "Never Cross the Divide: Reconstructing Langston Hughes's Not Without Laughter." African American Review 28, 4 (winter 1994): 601- 615. Sims, Sheila Cunningham. "Classroom Uses of Langston Hughes' Poetry." Langston Hughes Review (spring-fall 1996): 79-93. Singh, Armritjit. "Beyond the Mountain: Langston Hughes on Race/Class and Art." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1987): 37-43. Skinner, Daniel T. "Langston Hughes at Harvard College." The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1982): 32. Smith, Raymond. "Langston Hughes: Evolution of the Poetic Persona." Studies in Literary Imagination 7 (fall 1974): 49-64. Smith, Robert P. "Memorable Encounter with Langston Hughes." The Langston Hughes Review 2, 1 (Spring 1983): 14-15. Spencer, T. J. and Clarence Rivers. "Langston Hughes: His Style and Optimism." Drama Critique: A Critical Review of Theatre Arts and Literature 7 (spring 1964): 99-102. Spicer, Eloise Y. "The Blues and the Son: Reflections of Black Self-Assertion in the Poetry of Langston Hughes and Nicolas Guillen." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1984): 1-12. Sundquist, Eric J. "Who Was Langston Hughes?" Commentary (Dec. 1996): 55-59. Sweet, Donald. "Langston Hughes' 'Hope.'". The Langston Hughes Review 2, 2 (fall 1983): 19-21. Thomas, H. Nigel. "Patronage and the Writing of Langston Hughes's Not Without Laughter: A Paradoxical Case." College Language Association Journal (Sept. 1998): 48-70. Thurston, Michael. "Black Christ, Red Flag: Langston Hughes on Scottsboro." College Literature (Oct. 1995): 30-49. Tracy, Steven C. "Blues to Live By: Langston Hughes's 'The Blues I'm Playing.'" The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1993): 12-18. – – –"Langston Hughes: Poetry, Blues, and Gospel: Somewhere to Stand." In Langston Hughes: The Man, His Art, and His Continuing Influence, ed. James C. Trotman. New York: Garland, 1995. – – –"'Midnight ruffles of cat-gut lace': The Boogie Poems of Langston Hughes." College Language Association Journal (Sept. 1988): 55-68. – – –"Simple's Great African-American Joke." College Language Association Journal (March 1984): 239-253. – – –"To the Tune of Those Weary Blues: The Influence of the Blues Tradition in Langston Hughes's Blues Poems." The Journal of the Society for the Study of the Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States 8, 3 (fall 1981): 73-98. Turner, Beth. "Simplifyin': Langston Hughes and Alice Childress Re/member Jesse B. Semple." Langston Hughes Review (spring 1997): 37-48. Turner, Darwin T. "Langston Hughes as Playwright." CLA Journal 11 297-309. Waldron, Edward E. "The Blues Poetry of Langston Hughes." NALF 5 (winter 1971): 140-149. Walker, Alice. "Turning into Love: Some Thoughts on Surviving and Meeting Langston Hughes." Callaloo: A Journal of African American and African Arts and Letters (fall 1989): 663-666. Walker, Carolyn P. "Liberating Christ: Sargeant's Metamorphosis in Langston Hughes' 'On the Road.'" BALF 25, 4 (winter 1991): 745-753. Walkowitz, Rebecca A. "Shakespeare in Harlem: The Norton Anthology, 'Propaganda', Langston Hughes." Modern Language Quarterly: A Journal of Literary History 60, 4. (December 1999): 495-519. Werner, Craig. "Blues for T. S. Eliot and the Langston Hughes: The Afro Modernist Aesthetic of Harlem Gallery." BALF 24, 3 (fall 1990): 453- White, Jeannette S. and Clement A. White. "Langston Hughes' 'On the Road': No Path to Freedom." Langston Hughes Review (spring 1996): 97-103. White, Jeannette S. and Clement A. White. "Two Nations, One Vision: America's Langston Hughes and Cuba';s Nicolas Guillen: Poetry of Affirmation: A Revision." The Langston Hughes Review (spring 1993): 42-50. Williams, Melvin G. "The Gospel According to Simple." Black American Literature Forum (1977): 46-48. Williams, Melvin G. "Langston Hughes's Jesse B. Semple: A Black Walter Mitty." NALF (1976): 66-69. Williams, Sherley A. "The Blues Roots of Contemporary Afro-American Poetry." In Chant of Saints: A Gathering of Afro-American Literature, Art, and Scholarship, by Michael S. Harper, Rober B. Stepto, and John Hope Franklin. Urbana, Ill.: University of Illinois Press, 1979. Williams, Sherley Anne. "Langston Hughes and the Negro Renaissance: 'Harlem Literati in the Twenties' (1940); 'The Twenties: Harlem and Its Negritude (1966).'" The Langston Hughes Review (fall 1985): vi-ix. Wintz, Cary D. "Langston Hughes: A Kansas Poet in the Harlem Renaissance." Kansas Q. 7, 3 (summer 1975): 58-71. "Banquet in Honor." Negro Quarterly 1, 2 (summer 1942): 176-178. "Living Langston: Poet Laureate of Black America Honored at 89th Anniversary Celebration, The," Ebony 46, 7 (May 1991): 81-84. Lawrence
CyberVillage Langston
Hughes in Lawrence American
Jazz Museum University
of Missouri Press C-SPAN's American Writers Series on the Harlem Renaissance writers features Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston on September 24 and 28. The Poetry Daily site, www.poems.com Blackwriters.org, www.blackwriters.org A Website of various poetry links, www.linklane.com/p/poets.htm A Hughes Timeline from PBS provides information about Hughes's life, in the context of his work and major world events. Internet School Library Media Center. E- Text available at http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/hughes.htm The Academy of American Poets http://www.poets.org - on line exhibit with biographical information, poetry, and bibliography. Allows you to find any poem or poet, listen to it, join a discussion form, see events, and search other literary links. Langston Hughes Tribute http://langstonhughes.8m.com/ - poems, pictures, paintings, links to other places. Created by Christopher Kamsler Harlem Renaissance website http://www.nku.edu/~diesmanj/harlem.html Langston Hughes's Weary Blues http://www.geocities.com/xxxjorgexxx/hughes1.htm - poems in English and Spanish with audio clips of jazz accompaniment. Langston Hughes Society http://www.uga.edu/~iaas/home.html Library of Congress http://lcweb.loc.gov New York Public Library, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture http://www.si.umich.edu/CHICO/Harlem/ www.redhotjazz.com/hughes.html www.liben.com/Hugheslinks.html Other Websites NEW PUBLICATION Langston Hughes in the Classroom: "Do Nothin' till You Hear from Me." By Carmaletta M. Williams. NCTE High School Literature Series. Urbana, IL: NCTE, 2006. Provides the tools teachers need to make Hughes' works come alive for students in the twenty-first-century classroom. African American Autobiography for Middle School Students. Unit plan by Delores Marshall. Artistic Justice: the Artist as Historian and Social Critic. By Medria Blue. English, African American history. Grades 6-8. The Blues Impulse-An Era and the Ambiguity of Adolescence. Unit plan by Sequella Coleman. Poetry, social studies, reading, English grades 6–8. Creating Blues: An Interdisciplinary Study. Language arts, music, art, writing; grades 6-8; by Medria Blue. Discovery Theater. Sweet and Sour Animal Book by Langston Hughes. From Discovery Theater, Smithsonian. Information on the 1997 play based on Hughes' alphabet book. In Search of Afro American Poets in Modern Times. By Cynthia H. Roberts; biography poetry. Special education, learning disabled, and socially emotionally maladjusted. Grades 9-12. Langston Hughes: Voice Among Voices. By G. Casey Cassidy. Biography, autobiography, short stories. Comparative literature unity for grades 7-12. Living Pictures Representing the History of Black Dance. By Michelle Edmonds-Sepulveda. Dance, drama, poetry. Grades 6-8. Poetry for "Special" Students. Special education, language arts, grades 7-12. By Victoria Malison. From Yale New Haven. The Role of the African Playwright as a Griot. By Gerene L. Freeman. Creative writing, drama, English, Afro American history. Grades 10-12. SCORE Teacher Guide. The Poetry of Langston Hughes. Grades 9-10; From San Diego County Office of Education. Steps Toward Writing Poetry. By Pearl Elaine Mitchell. Grades 4-6. Poetry, language arts. The Stranger Redeemed: A Portrait of a Black Poet. A biography unit. By Ivory Erkerd. Middle school grades 7-8. Tales from the City. Unity plan by Bill Coden. Harlem Renaissance. Black history for college track English. Grade 10. Understanding and Appreciating Poetry: Afro Americans and Their Poetry. By Frances Ellen Pierce. Poetry reading language arts, Grade 6. We, Too, Sing America. By G. Casey Cassidy. Poetry Black history literature. Grades 7-12. Berger, Jean. Songs. New York: Broud Bros. Four songs with poems by Langston Hughes. Bonds, Margaret. Ballad of the Brown King: A Christmas Cantata for Chorus of Mixed Voices. New York: S. Fox Pub. Co., 1961. Music by Margaret Bonds with text by Langston Hughes. Bontemps, Arna Wendell. Anthology of Negro Poetry. 1 sound disc. Folkways, 1961. Gordon, Ricky Ian. Genius Child: A Cycle of 10 Songs. Williamson Music; distributed by Hal Leonard, 1995. Music by Ricky Gordan, using poems by Langston Hughes. Hughes, Langston. The First Album of Jazz for Children, with Documentary Recordings from the Library of Folkways Records. New York: Folkways Records, 1954. – – – The Glory of Negro History. 1 sound disc. New York: Folkways Records, 1958. – – – Langston Hughes: The Making of a Poet. Washington, D.C.: National Public Radio Cassettes, 1988. – – – Langston Hughes Reads His Poetry [Abridged]. Audiocassette. Harper Audio, 2000. – – – Langston Hughes Reads: One Way Ticket, The Negro Speaks of Rivers, the Ku Klux Klan and Other of His Poems. Audiocassette. Caedmon Audio Cassette, 1992. – – – Langston Hughes Reads and Talks About His Poems. Audiocassette. Spoken Arts, 1987. – – – Poems from Black Africa. 1 cassette recording. Caedmon – – – The Poetry of Langston Hughes. 1 cassette. Caedmon, 1969?. – – – Poetry and Reflections. 1 cassette. Caedmon, 1980. – – – Simple Speaks His Mind. 1 sound disc, Folkways Records, 1952. – – – Simple Stories. 1 cassette. Caedmon, 1968. (7 stories from The Best of Simple and Simple's Uncle Sam.) – – – Story of Jazz. Distribution North American, 1985. Audiocassette. – – – Tambourines to Glory. 1 sound disc. Folkways Records, 1958. (Gospel songs by Langston Hughes and Jobe Huntley.) – – – The Voice of Langston Hughes 1995. Hughes, Langston, and Kurt Weill. Street Scene (1989 English National Opera Cast). 1989. Hughes, Langston and Charles Mingus. Weary Blues. 1958. Siegmeister, Elie. Madam to You. Sound recording. Composers Recordings, 1979. Siegmeister, Elie. Ways of Love: Langston Hughes Songs. 1 sound disc. Five pieces for piano. New York: CRI, 1986. Swanson, Howard. Seven Songs. 1 sound disc. New York: American Recording Society, 1953. Jericho – Jim Crow. 2 sound discs. New York: Folkways, 1964. The Beat Generation. 3 sound discs. Santa Monica, Ca: Rhino/ Word Beat, 1992. (Includes "Blues Montage" Langston Hughes with Leonard Feather). The Spoken Arts Treasury of 100 Modern American Poets Reading Their Poems. 1 sound cassette. New Rochelle, N.Y.: Spoken Arts, 1985. Black Americans of Achievement Video Collection II, Langston Hughes: Poet. Produced and directed by Rhonda Rabian and Jerry Baber; executive producer, Andrew Schlessinger. Bala Cynwyd, Pa.: Schlessinger Video Productions, 1994. Cora Unashamed. PBS / Exxon Mobil Masterpiece Theatre, 2001. The Harlem Renaissance and Beyond. Mt. Kisco, N.Y.: Guidance Associates, 1990. I Hear America Sing. PBS biography. I'll Make Me a World. PBS Film Series. Chronicling African Americans and struggle for citizenship. Features Langston Hughes. Langston. Davis, Ossie. (a play) New York : Delacorte Press, 1982. Langston Hughes. Annenberg CPB Project. New York, N.Y.: New York Center for Visual History, 1988. Langston Hughes: The Dream Keeper. South Carolina Educational Television Network, a New York Center for Visual History production; director, St. Clair Bourne; producer, Robert Chapman. Santa Barbara, Calif.; Intellimation, 1988. Langston Hughes: The Poet in Our Hearts. Derry, N.H.: Chip Taylor Communications, 1995. Looking For Langston: A Meditation on Langston Hughes (1902-1967) and the Harlem Renaissance: with the Poetry of Essex Hemphill and Bruce Nugent. Sankofa Film and Video. New York, N.Y.: Water Bearer Films, 1992. Voices and Visions: Langston Hughes. VHS 1998. |
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