Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

English Theme for English B

Good Essays
1144 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
English Theme for English B
Analysis of Theme for English B
Langston Hughes

The premise behind this poem is that the speaker is a black college student whose instructor has given his students an assignment to write a paper about themselves. While the poem takes the reader through his walk home from class and his thought process about “who he is”, the final line of the poem, “This is my page for English B” (ll. 41) suggests that this poem is the paper he has written for class. Langston Hughes wrote this poem during the Harlem Renaissance of the late 1910s, so a reader might immediately assume that the main topic involves race or racial prejudice. The second stanza almost takes this direction when the speaker mentions that he is “the only colored student in [his] class” (ll. 10). The third stanza changes directions, though, when the speaker, addressing his white instructor, says, “I guess being colored doesn’t make me not like / the same things other folks like who are other races” (ll. 25-26). This suggests that he is not, because he is black, different than others, but rather, the same. White people might think that his preferences are different, but they are actually similar. Asking “So will my page be colored that I write” (ll. 27) is a creative play on his identity that will come across in the paper he will write for class; will it reflect his “blackness”?, he wonders. It “will not be white” (ll. 28) he knows, since he is not, but it will partially reflect his instructor, the one who gave the assignment. After all, both he and his instructor are human (“yet a part of me, as I am a part of you” (ll. 32)). As the poem closes, the speaker draws his conclusions about his own racial identity: he no more wants to be white than his white instructor wants to be black, but there is no denying the similarity between them. He’ll learn from the instructor (“As I learn from you”(ll. 37)) but the instructor will also learn from him (“I guess you learn from me” (ll. 38)). Perhaps he thinks the instructor does not understand what it’s like to be black. A quick scan through the lines of this poem reveals the frequent use of the words “I”, “me”, and “you”, which are a clue for the poem’s overall theme: should one find his identity through his race, or through ordinary, everyday elements, likes and dislikes, enjoyable pastimes and perceptions of life? In lines 6-15 alone, the word “I” is used to ask questions, tell his age, race, and birthplace, his college, and route home to the Harlem Branch YMCA. This is how he identifies himself outwardly to others. The third stanza uses “I” and “me” to compare himself to “you”, the instructor. The speaker identifies himself with Harlem in the lines which read “But I guess I’m what / I feel and see and hear, Harlem, I hear you: / hear you, hear me – we two – you, me, talk on this page” (ll.17-19). Many black people during this time were inspired by Harlem’s empowerment of their community. Having a black heritage was seen as positive and black poets, musicians and authors thrived in Harlem. The speaker has likely been encouraged by living in Harlem, and therefore sees his black identity in direct contrast to “you”, the white identity of his instructor. He’s not entirely sure, though, because the short line “Me – who?” (ll. 20) indicates that his identity isn’t clear to him, or maybe to whites. The fourth stanza’s conclusion about this issue recognizes that to allow blacks to be proud of their heritage is “American” (ll. 33). While this poem doesn’t seem to make use of specific figurative language, there is one instance of alliteration which makes a neat point. In the third stanza, the speaker points out the things he enjoys that help to identify him, including “records – Bessie, bop, or Bach” (ll. 24). This intentional alliteration identifies three different types of music: a jazz vocalist (Bessie Smith), the bop genre, and Bach (classical), to point out that even a black man whose culture strongly identifies with jazz and bop music, can like classical music which is often associated with white culture. The alliteration serves to highlight the “sameness” of these three, all of which he likes, but their difference lies in their cultural associations. Although there is no specific rhyme scheme, internal rhyme throughout and the rhyme at the end seem intentional. The internal rhyme has an almost sing-song sound to it, and provides a beautiful flow from line to line. In lines 16-17, the rhyme of “true”, “you” and “two” and the enjambment of the lines seems to ask the question “what is true of ‘you’ and me”? This same rhyme patter is repeated in the fourth stanza in lines 35-36, “Nor do I often want to be a part of you. / But we are, that’s true!”. This seems to answer the question: the common factor between “you” and “me” is that we are part of each other, “that’s true!”. As the speaker comes to this decision in the end, the tone is final and the end rhyme becomes even, as though his decision is final and right. He says “I guess you learn from me - / although you’re older – and white - / and somewhat more free. / This is my page for English B”. The rhyme of “me”, “free” and “B” suggest an answer to his question: the instructor will learn from him, although it will not immediately change the identity of any person, white or black. This is one of my favorite poems because of its rhythm and rhyme. Lines like “Harlem, I hear you: / hear you, hear me – we two – you, me” (ll. 18-19) and the last four have a rhythm like music and the words just flow from my mouth as I read them. They’re short and simple, but pack such a powerful punch. And while I cannot identify with the racial divide so present in this poem, I like to think about how being white is assumed, and being black is not. It was probably such a simple assignment for the professor to give, yet how many of the white students would have written about being “white”? And does the speaker think that the instructor will expect him to write about being black? And will his paper reflect being black or will it be just as “white” as the others? Hughes makes a play on this concept with the line “So will my page be colored that I write?” (ll. 27). For me, this poem is easy to understand but not overly simplified. The concept is a complex one, but is presented in a way that makes it seem like a neat little package.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    How does the poetry of Langston Hughes, “I, Too,” “Harlem,” and “A Song to a Negro…

    • 684 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    I feel that the poem “I, Too” represents and explains the author’s desire to write. In the quotation, I have presented above, shows how he will overcome racial discrimination through showing just how beautiful and valuable he is through his writing and poetry. During the time period, people of color were not permitted to sit at the table as a guest. They were forced to eat in the kitchen when entertaining. This act is what Hughes is referring to and it was a common practice of racial segregation. Hughes is, nevertheless, hopeful and optimistic. For in his writing, he connects the world of a colored man to that of a white man. As the literature book descried him, “a champion of his own society who never hesitated to speak freely.” In his free…

    • 151 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Next, he starts to list what he likes. “Well, I like to eat, sleep, drink, and be in love. I like to work, read, learn, and understand life. I like a pipe for a Christmas present, or records—Bessie, bop, or Bach.” Then he supposes that being African American does not make him all that different in the things he likes as other races. So the question occurs to him, “So will my page be colored that I write?” He wonders if his race will make a difference in what he writes, and he wonders whether he will be able to communicate with a white instructor, because he is black.…

    • 514 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While Langston Hughes questions his identity in his 1951 poem, “Theme for English B”, the piece closely relates to Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1963 “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” considering that both works relay the authors underlying values of equality.…

    • 567 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the poems, “Let America Be America Again” and “Negro” by Langston Hughes, the voice of the narrator appear to be bold and pitiful. The tones of both poems are anger and bitterness from the minority groups in America towards the majority group. The themes of each poem vary in ways but they are also similar pertaining to the way that African Americans do not have equal opportunities in America just like the other minority groups living in America. In “Let America Be America Again”, Langston Hughes illustrates that America is not the land of the free like it is advertised. In “Negro”, Hughes also castigate America but from the point of the view of an African American.…

    • 872 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Professor A’s interpretation stems from a historical standpoint. He/she views the poem, as the struggles African-Americans, in the late 1800s to the…

    • 680 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the poem, “Theme for English B”, Langston Hughes demonstrates how the speaker feels about this English B paper assignment. He puts you in his conscious and has you go through his thoughts to give you a sense of what he is feeling like in this classroom being the only colored student in a class full of white students. The speaker is told to write a paper about himself. When that paper gets assigned, he is stumped. He took in consideration that he is the only colored student in his entire class. For him that was very shocking, coming from towns that had a colored community. The racial tension made coming to school a challenge. When he starts to brainstorm ideas, he realizes that he is like the other students around him after all. For example, he brainstorms how both him and the other students would be ecstatic to share about their new record they got. Being a new student at a new school can be terrifying. The speaker of this essay was at first, but then he came to realize the things that made everyone in that classroom similar. He started connecting with those around him, realizing that he was just like everyone else. All any new student wants coming into a new school is to fit in, and he found his way of doing just…

    • 1255 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    If you look at the titles of both poems Hughes poem is a direct response to Whitman's. Whitman's poem says “I hear america singing.” Hughes poem responds “I too sing america.” Hughes took Whitman's title which talks about hearing the voice of america and Hughes said all people even the colored are apart of the voice of america. That is because everyone contributes their carols and voice to america since they are a part of it. Not just the white men who have more power over the colored people. Another thing was that Whitman's poem was happy and had a good connotation as he used words like “carol, strong, blithe” while Hughes was more opposite and negative as he used words that would include things like “I am the darker brother”. The negative connotation creates a more darker mood in Hughes poem. This shows that america is not all rainbows. There is a bad part of America that needs to be fixed. In the end Hughes ends off his poem “Besides, They’ll see how beautiful I am. And Be Ashamed. The reason he says this at the end of the poem is to show that one day it will be different. There will be no discrimination between different colors and races. His ambition for writing the poem was to try to achieve equality. People will not be judged by the color of their skin or race but by their achievements. Everyone will be able to truely be considered an…

    • 1061 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Harlem Renaissance was a literary, artistic, and intellectual movement that kindled a new black cultural identity” (The Harlem Renaissance). In the Harlem Renaissance poem, Theme for English B by Langston Hughes, he uses imagery, rhyme, and alliteration to effectively demonstrate African – American struggle for equality. This poem was written during a time when colored people struggled a lot, and it shows that people may learn from each other no matter their ethnicity. In the Langston Hughes poem, he argues, be confident and know who you are, being a different color does not mean that a person is any different or does not think the same.…

    • 762 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Jamell Grimes 1

    • 1858 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Langston Hughes was an American poet, social activist, and novelist who also was the leader of the Harlem Renaissance. He was well-known for his poetry in the early 20th century, in which most of his work reflected the oppression experienced by blacks in the south. Such as poems “crossed” and “song from a dark girl”, in which the two poems are similar in tone, language, and symbolism. The tone in both poems are of distress and confusion which derived from the discrimination towards blacks in the early 1900’s. Both poems expresses a great amount of sorrow due unjust racial discrimination imposed on blacks at the time. Lines such as “they hung my black lover” and “I wonder where I’m gone die, being neither white or black” exemplifies the distressfulness in the tone of both poems. In the poem “a song for a black girl” a African American girl expresses her sorrow over her dead black lover, who was hung, which we can assume was done by whites; because of the racial discrimination and segregation between blacks and whites in the south. Similar to the distress the author of the poem “cross” is experiencing, in which the writer is “mixed” with a white father and black mother. The author is angry and confused about his racial identity because of the heavy racial basis and segregation in the south, placing him in a purgatory area, not knowing if he’ll die as a white man or black man.…

    • 1858 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rape Me American Summary

    • 672 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The poem also shows that racism is prevalent, the text states, “we are the wrong people of the wrong skin on the wrong continent.” The line shows how African Americans were uncomfortable in their own skin. You were judged by the color of your skin and it affected your wealth and authority. There are still stereotypical views on appearance shown here: “I should have been lighter…

    • 672 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    We as humans are born a different race, but we are still the same. In Langston Hughes "Theme for English B" his diction created an atmospherical representation of the world that he lived in and the world where we wanted and hoped to live. The speaker in the poem explains that although he is black and the instructor is white they are still the same.…

    • 521 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In this poem, the "I" is a student. The poem is written like a narrative "I am twenty-two, colored, born in Winston-Salem". Unlike the first poem, "I" is used here to show power and individuality. The speaker, an African-American student given an English writing assignment, approaches his teacher in an intelligent, even pointed discussion. Hughes makes use of the first-person point of view to heighten the effect of the story. By using words like "I" and "them", "me" and "you," the speaker is able to point out the differences between himself and his teacher. One passage in particular stands out for its continuous connection of the words "you" and…

    • 497 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    After approaching the "Harlem Branch Y," and returning to his apartment, the speaker begins his paper. He reflects on his life as an average twenty-two year old student. He begins to ignore race and tries to focus on his individuality. He likes "a pipe for a Christmas present or records-Bessie, bop, or Bach." This sentence provides a perfect example of alliteration. Keeping in mind to "let that page come out of you--/Then, it will be true", the speaker is honest with himself and tries not to hide behind the "white" page. He identifies with his culture and lets the reader "see and hear, Harlem". This poem shows the speaker's "true" feelings towards society, how some white people "don't want to be a part of me". He reflects on the present state of blacks in America, racism, and most importantly the oppression he feels as a black student stating that "white" people are "somewhat more free". I believe Hughes wrote this poem as a protest against racism. Through his speaker, Hughes desperately pleads with his readers to strive for a unified America free of…

    • 259 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the majority of Langston Hughes literary work there were racial tones. He mocks the illusion that America puts to the outside world that there is opportunity for all and the equality among all people. He uses his personal experiences as young black man living an America to draw inspiration too. He explains that in America the country pampers white people, but demonizes blacks. In many of his writings he expresses his conflict of being a person of mixed race but having a clear appearance of a black man. The hate that he experiences as a black man from both blacks and whites. He also holds blacks accountable for not giving a helping hand to the fellow black Americans. Everyone can read and understand his poems. Given the education level of a lot of Langston’s audience, it was important for him to use more of a relaxed form of writing.…

    • 317 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays