Nearly a century after his birth in Joplin, Missouri, Langston Hughes is, in a sense, coming home. The University of Missouri Press is proud to announce the publication of The Collected Works of Langston Hughes, a compilation of the novels, short stories, poems, plays, and essays by one of the twentieth century's most prolific and influential African American authors. The seventeen-volume series will make available Hughes's most famous works as well as less well known and out-of-print selections, providing readers and libraries with a comprehensive source for the first time.Hughes moved to Harlem in the 1920s and ultimately became the most prominent figure in the literary, artistic, and intellectual phenomenon known as the Harlem Renaissance. Hughes wrote articles for The Crisis and in 1926 published his first book of poetry, The Weary Blues. Over the decades until his death in 1967, he became one of the best-known and most versatile American writers of the twentieth century. His creative range -- poetry, novels, short fiction, drama, translations, gospel-song plays, libretti, juvenile fiction, radio and television scripts, history, biography, and autobiography -- is unique in American letters.The seventeen volumes of the Collected Works are to be published with the goal that Hughes pursued throughout his lifetime: making his books available to the people. Each volume will include a biographical and literary chronology by Arnold Rampersad, as well as an introduction by a Hughes scholar. The volume introductions will provide contextual and historical information on the particular work.In the first volume of his autobiography, The Big Sea, covering the years through 1931, Hughesoffers recollections of his childhood in Kansas, his high school years in Cleveland, his sojourn with his father in Mexico, and his initial reactions to New York City and Harlem.Commentaries on the "Black Renaissance" in Harlem and Washington, D.C., are intertwined with recollections of his student years at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania, his travels through the South, and his association as a "younger generation" poet with the New York and Harlem literary establishment represented by Crisis and Opportunity magazines. Personal memories of Jessie Fauset, Countee Cullen, Jean Toomer, W.E.B. Du Bois, Wallace Thurman, Alain Locke, Carter G. Woodson, Vachel Lindsey, Leila Walker, and others are augmented by allusions to such celebrities as Duke Ellington, Florence Mills, Eubie Blake, Josephine Baker, Bert Williams, Theodore Dreiser, Ethel Barrymore, and Bessie Smith.Hughes addresses such controversial issues as his literary and personal disagreements with Zora Neale Hurston over their play Mule Bone, Carl Van Vechten's problematic novel Nigger Heaven, racial matters at Lincoln University, the Jim Crow laws in the South, and the failures of white patronage. Furthermore, Hughes refers to the sources of a blues poetry aesthetic, his visit to Cuba, and the struggle to complete his first novel, Not without Laughter. A rare presentation of the Harlem Renaissance from the perspective of an insider, The Big Sea also offers a "black perspective" on the expatriate life in Europe during the Roaring Twenties.
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我必须承认,这本书的价值远超出了我对任何一本“合集”的预期。它提供的不是零散的片段,而是一个完整的、不断成长的声音景观。从那些充满激昂斗志的早期呼喊,到后来那些更加复杂、更加 nuanced(微妙的)对身份认同的探索, Hughes 的文字始终保持着一种无可替代的真实性。他从不回避那些令人不适的现实,却又总能在现实的缝隙中,提炼出一种属于他自己民族的、独特的、不可复制的美学。我特别喜欢其中关于音乐和舞蹈的描写,那些文字本身似乎就带着旋律和律动,让你忍不住在脑海中为之配上鼓点。阅读的过程,更像是一场跨越时空的对话,我能感受到他与我之间通过文字建立起的一种深刻的默契。这是一部值得反复阅读、每次都能从中挖掘出新层次的作品,它不仅是文学史上的里程碑,更是对所有追求自由和表达自我的人们,一份永恒的指引。
评分老实说,我一开始拿到这本厚厚的合集是有点望而生畏的,心想这得读到什么时候去。但一旦真正沉浸进去,时间感就完全消失了。 Hughes 的文字有一种魔力,它能瞬间将你拽入那个特定的历史场景。我常常在读到一些关于南方和北方,关于等待、关于希望与幻灭的篇章时,忍不住停下来,走到窗边,望着外面的世界,思考着“等待一个上帝”究竟意味着什么——是漫长的忍耐,还是内在的蓄力?他的叙事风格变化多端,时而像一个愤世嫉俗的老者,用尖锐的讽刺揭露那些虚伪的道德;时而又像一个天真的孩子,用最纯粹的语言描绘他对公平的向往。这种在极端的现实主义和浪漫的理想主义之间的自由切换,让整部作品的张力达到了极致。我尤其欣赏他对语言的驾驭,他大胆地吸收了口语、俚语,甚至是音乐的结构,这使得他的“经典”作品读起来却丝毫没有陈腐之气,反而充满了永恒的活力和现代性。这本书,绝不是那种放在书架上积灰的“文化符号”,它是活的,它在呼吸。
评分我对这部作品的体验,更像是经历了一场马拉松式的精神洗礼,中间有高亢的呐喊,也有低沉的哀叹。如果用一个词来概括,那就是“共鸣”。我不是那个时代或那个族裔的亲历者,但 Hughes 笔下那种被边缘化、被忽视的感觉,却是人类共同的情感体验。他没有用那种宏大叙事来压迫你,而是选择聚焦于个体,聚焦于那些在角落里默默努力、试图为自己争取一席之地的“小人物”。你读到他描述的那些平凡的夜晚,简陋的房间,以及那些用歌声和舞蹈来对抗生活的努力,会觉得自己的烦恼瞬间变得微不足道。他教会了我,诗歌不一定非要高高在上,它可以是日常生活的记录,是情绪的即时反应。更妙的是,即使在最黑暗的篇章里,也总有一丝难以磨灭的、近乎固执的乐观潜藏其中。那不是盲目的希望,而是经历过所有苦难后依然选择站立的勇气。
评分这本书简直是一场精神的盛宴,读完之后感觉灵魂都被洗涤了一遍。它不像那种故作高深的文学作品,需要你戴着放大镜去揣摩每一个字背后的玄机。恰恰相反, Hughes 的文字带着一种泥土的芬芳和街头的烟火气,直击人心最柔软也最坚韧的部分。我特别喜欢他捕捉那种日常生活中微小却又深刻的瞬间的能力,比如清晨第一缕阳光照在贫民窟窗台上的那种转瞬即逝的美感,或者是在爵士乐的低吟浅唱中,人们暂时忘却生活重压的那一刻的解放感。他的诗歌,有些读起来像是一种即兴的独白,充满节奏感,仿佛能听到那个时代纽约哈莱姆区的喧嚣和心跳。你不需要成为什么文学评论家才能理解他,只需要一颗愿意倾听的心。那些关于种族、关于身份、关于梦想被现实反复揉搓的故事,读起来让人心头一紧,但又从中汲取到一种不可思议的力量,仿佛在说,即使世界不公,也要保持自己的尊严和独特的韵律。这本书就像一面镜子,照出了美国社会深层的肌理,也照亮了无数在边缘挣扎的灵魂。
评分这本书的编排本身就很有意思,像是一部精心策划的音乐会,收录了不同阶段、不同情绪的作品,让你能清晰地看到作者心路历程的变化。有些早期作品的激情和直白,读起来像是一拳打在胸口,力量感十足,充满了对不公义的控诉和对变革的渴望。而后期的一些作品则显得更加内敛、更加具有哲思性,它们不再只是愤怒的咆哮,而变成了对存在意义的深沉探讨。这种跨度的展示,对于读者理解一位艺术家如何在其一生中不断自我审视和突破,是极具价值的。我发现自己时而沉浸在那种强烈的节奏感中无法自拔,仿佛真的在听着一曲蓝调;时而又被他那些极其精准而富有画面感的意象所震撼——比如“月亮像一块被遗忘的硬币”这类句子,简单到极致,却又蕴含着无限的失落与重量。它不是一本消遣读物,更像是一本需要你不断翻阅、沉淀和反刍的文学地图集。
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