This section contains 628 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |
Critical Analysis of "Theme for English B"
Summary: Provides a critical analysis of Langston Hughes' poem "Theme for English B". Describes how Hughes gives us insight into the thoughts and emotions of the main character, the young student, and ends the piece with several thought provoking passages. After succinctly describing the city and the student's living conditions, Langston Hughes gives us insight into the thoughts and aspirations that are common to all races.
When I first read Langston Hughes' poem "Theme for English B", I did not particularly like it. But after reading it a second time and discussing it in class, I came to appreciate the poem on several levels. The way Hughes describes the setting of Harlem/New York is brief, but evocative. He also gives us insight into the thoughts and emotions of the main character, the young "colored" student, and ends the piece with several thought provoking passages.
In the first stanza we find the student, who is also the narrator, having gotten his homework assignment to write a paper, is returning home to Harlem. The school he attends is "on the hill" (line 9), and apparently is in a "better" part of town, so he has to travel through the various areas of the city. The streets he crosses are named, and then he gets "to the...
This section contains 628 words (approx. 3 pages at 300 words per page) |