Carmaletta M. Williams provides high school teachers with background
on Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance as well as help in teaching
Hughes's poetry, short stories, novels, and autobiography.
Though high school English teachers often include a few poems by
Langston Hughes in their curriculum, they may not know the impressive
range of his writing, which includes poetry, novels, short stories,
plays, librettos, political propaganda, and autobiography. This volume
in the NCTE High School Literature Series contextualizes the work of
this key figure of the Harlem Renaissance and the New Negro Movement.
Because Hughes's life experiences are so closely intertwined with his
work, each chapter first demonstrates how Hughes's life and art
reinforce each other, with a focus on Hughes's blues poetry, the novel
Not without Laughter, his autobiography, and short stories. Each chapter
closes with a section called In the Classroom, which offers practical
suggestions for discussion, activities, and assignments, and includes
samples of student work. A detailed chronology, a glossary of terms, and
a selected bibliography round out the many useful features of this
resource guide. By combining the study of literature, music, and
history, Langston Hughes in the Classroom: "Do Nothin' till You Hear
from Me" provides the tools teachers need to make the works of Langston
Hughes come alive for their students in the twenty-first-century
classroom.