Friday, February 17, 2012

Dreams By Langston Hughes Poem Analysis



This poem was saying that you should hold on to your dreams because life without dreams is nothing & that if you do hold on to dreams transform into thoughts and thoughts result in action, so he is encouraging you to dream.
This was a very inspiring poem that made you want to dream of better in life or the world. But I was a great way to inspire people to dream because you do not know how far you will get with that dream.


Mother To Son Langston Hughes Poems Analysis





Mother To Son Analysis


This poem is about a mother that has worked very hard in life and is still working hard, in doing so she has turned her life around somewhere along the line and found it to be harder to go back than to stay focus on your dream or destination. Now that her son is coming along in life, he now sees that life is not a crystal stair and there will be bumps and other curves in life but you have to stay straight because it not necessarily easier to get ahead but it is a lot harder to turn back and then turn in the right direction. Also, she is trying to keep her son from making that same mistake because although lifes' obstacles may or may not be a crystal stair it takes hard work to claim it. The tone of this poem is worried and critical, for example & i quote So, boy, don't you turn back, don't you set down on the steps." She was being critical telling him don't sit down on them steps and to not look back but to keep moving forward.

I really enjoyed this poem and i thought i was alot of meaning put into this and it had a deeper meaning of it.

Why/Wise Poem Analysis


Why/Wise Analysis
This poem is about how African people were enslaved and brought to America to be slaves and this poem basically tells us to not to forget about what happen to people in Africa. The tone of this poem is emotional, frightening and gloomy.  For example he says “in the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean there’s a railroad of bones” he is talking about all the Africans that died on that boat journey that transported all the African slaves to America, he also says that “my brother the king sold me to the ghost “so what he means is that the king of Africa sold his people the slave masters/Slave owners.
I believe this was a very heart taking poem, it was very sad to think about what had happened in African & to the African people that lived there. But this poem was very truthful & informational things about what had actually happened in Africa at that time.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Amiri Baraka Biography


Amiri Baraka born in 1934, in Newark, New Jersey, USA, is the author of over 40 books of essays, poems, drama, and music history and criticism, a poet icon and revolutionary political activist who has recited poetry and lectured on cultural and political issues extensively in the USA, the Caribbean, Africa, and Europe.
With influences on his work ranging from musical orishas such as Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane, Thelonius Monk, and Sun Ra to the Cuban Revolution, Malcolm X and world revolutionary movements, Baraka is renowned as the founder of the Black Arts Movement in Harlem in the 1960s that became, though short-lived, the virtual blueprint for a new American theater aesthetics. The movement and his published and performance work, such as the signature study on African-American music, Blues People (1963) and the play Dutchman (1963) practically seeded “the cultural corollary to black nationalism” of that revolutionary American milieu.
Other titles range from Selected Poetry of Amiri Baraka/LeRoi Jones (1979), to The Music (1987), a fascinating collection of poems and monographs on Jazz and Blues authored by Baraka and his wife and poet Amina, and his boldly sortied essays, The Essence of Reparations (2003).
He has been the subject of numerous documentary films including Mario Van Peeble's Poetic Licensefor The Sundance Channel and St. Clair Bourne's In Motion: Amiri Baraka. He has also appeared in dozens of films including, most recently, M.K. Asante, Jr's award-winning documentary The Black Candle.
The Essence of Reparations is Baraka’s first published collection of essays in book form radically exploring what is sure to become a twenty-first century watershed movement of Black peoples to the interrelated issues of racism, national oppression, colonialism, neo-colonialism, self-determination and national and human liberation, which he has long been addressing creatively and critically. It has been said that Amiri Baraka is committed to social justice like no other American writer. He has taught at Yale, Columbia, and the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
Somebody Blew Up America & Other Poems is Baraka’s first collection of poems published in the Caribbean and includes the title poem that has headlined him in the media in ways rare to poets and authors. The recital of the poem “that mattered” engaged the poet warrior in a battle royal with the very governor of New Jersey and with a legion of detractors demanding his resignation as the state’s Poet Laureate because of Somebody Blew Up America’s provocatively poetic inquiry (in a few lines of the poem) about who knew beforehand about the New York City World Trade Center bombings in 2001.
The poem’s own detonation caused the author’s photo and words to be splashed across the pages of New York’s Amsterdam News and the New York Times and to be featured on CNN--to name a few US city, state and national and international media.
Baraka lives in Newark with his wife and author Amina Baraka; they have five children and head up the word-music ensemble, Blue Ark: The Word Ship and co-direct Kimako’s Blues People, the “artspace” housed in their theater basement for some fifteen years.
His awards and honors include an Obie, the American Academy of Arts & Letters award, the James Weldon Johnson Medal for contributions to the arts, Rockefeller Foundation and National Endowment for the Arts grants, Professor Emeritus at the State university of New York at Stony Brook, and the Poet Laureate of New Jersey.

Amiri Baraka "Who Will Survive In America" Analysis


The tone of this poem was Very aggressive because they keep stressing & I quote “who will survive in American” it’s a rhetorical question having you to think about will you actually survive in America or not. Personification was used in stanza 3 line 1 ”America striped for bed and we had not all closed out eyes”. But this poem is a commentary is only a explanation on how America was built on a violent, inhumane legacy, and I believe what the poem was trying to unfold is that all one needs in life is a good home and a family, and how everything else is basically needless. It also has a lot to do with black people, as the most mistreated people to ever live in America - however, they survive, and will continue to do so. It explains how America was built on the backs of black slaves. How they will be the ones to survive in America.

Langston Hughes: The Life Of A Great Poet






Langston Hughes was an African American poet who was born on Feb 1, 1902 through May,1967 in Joplin Missouri. He was a very famous poet, socialist, playwriter, communist, and he was best known for being involved in the Harlem Renaissance. His mom was a teacher and he was a child of divorced parents. His dad moved to mexico to escape the racism that was going on in the U.S.  During that time Hughes, was raised by his grandmother until he was thirteen, when he moved to Lincoln, Illinois, to live with his mother and her husband, before the family eventually settled in Cleveland, Ohio.It was in Lincoln, Illinois, that Hughes begins writing poetry. When Langston got older he went on to move to mexico and various parts of the world. Langston Hughes was a poet and a writer living in the 1920s during the Harlem Renaissance. His work is what helped shaped the artistic contributions of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s. Some good character traits that Langston Hughes possessed was that he was very hardworking, caring, creative, adventerous, and thoughtful.

I picked Langston Hughes because unlike most other black poets, Hughes centered his poetry around all aspects of his people. From the suffering of racism, to the love of music. He based his work upon their actual lives and culture of his people .Langston, in his later years, was called " Poet Laureate of the Negro Race " a title he highly encouraged. He meant to represent his race with 100% , he was one of the most original African American poets and writers. Langston Hughes helped in many ways to the society. He was the 1st person known that could translate music especially jazz into poems. He also inspired many people to things they never did, or never really had the bravery to do. He put how he felt about what was going on at the time & also in his life into his poetry, plays, films etc.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Droping The L Word to my GrandFather!




I dont know why saying the L(ove)word around some people is like saying "this chicken is the BOMB! at an airport :). I had asked my grandfather about what he thinks the L(ove) word means to him. And he calls everyone in the room like i had shot the president, for some apprarent reason now he thinks im in Love with a girl but i just dont want to tell'him. But finally that Big bad wolf blow his house down and he explain to me what he believes LOVE means he believes love is when you can find that special person that you can share anything in the world with your hopes and dreams just about everything, that person that you can not spend a day without thinking of them, that person that you can trust and you know that they trust you with all there heart, dreams, secrects etc,that person that makes you wanna be a different man a new man, Love is that person that takes you to cloud 9 every time you see them, that person you can see being with together forever, that person you would die for, fight for, protect for,  and to do anything and everythingi n your god giving power to make them just smile :))))) The advice he give to me was that Love is not a flisbee or a football you just throw it in the air because that special person wont think it is a game when you throw her that L w o r d. And he always told me never pick my woman like i pick my car's fast,shiny,flashy and hot because they would drive circles around me ! Yes my grandfather been in love it was to my wonderful grandmother and they been in love since the 1970's and he just knew she was the one he wanted to spend all the days of his life with till death do them part.

Friday, March 18, 2011

 
The way I’m feeling, the things I say
all just happen, when you pass my way
what can I do to make you stay
I know its getting late
but girl I don’t want you to leave
you tell me you’re just not the type
you wanna do this right
and I’m not tryin to say I don’t believe you
but I refuse to feel ashamed
and if you feel the same
just wait and really make us better people
 
 
 

Thursday, March 10, 2011