In the poem “Harlem,” Langston Hughes asks a critical question about our lives. We all have dreams, ambitions and goals to achieve. But what happens to a dream deferred? While Hughes may have asked ...
The Arts Academy of Sedona in collaboration with The Verde Valley School is kicking off the celebration of America's Black ...
In nearly 14 years on the Delaware Court of Chancery, Glasscock has tied the specifics of cases to literary references, ...
6. “Harlem (What Happens to a Dream Deferred?)” by Langston Hughes Langston Hughes’ “Harlem,” often referred to by its opening line, “What happens to a dream deferred?” is one of the ...
On a miserably wet evening seven months after the death of Langston Hughes ... And she read about the “Dream Deferred.” And she read “Impasse”: “I could tell you, If I wanted to ...
You have to learn to be a bigot. Anything that you learn, you can unlearn. It’s time to get over this thing. We best get over ...
Baltimore theatergoers gathered at Baltimore Center Stage recently for a dazzling and heartfelt production of Langston Hughes’ “Black Nativity” as reimagined by ArtsCentric. The evening was ...
But Hughes is one of a handful of artists whose work spanned both the Harlem Renaissance and the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s and ’70s, which partnered with the modern Civil Rights Movement.
An early morning fire at the Langston Hughes NYCHA complex in Brooklyn left one person critically injured and eight others with minor injuries Tuesday, according to the FDNY. The blaze broke out ...
The slogan “Not Yet Uhuru” captures the unfulfilled promise of freedom—a dream deferred by systemic oppression and the indifference and complicity of those who should know better ...