English, asked by susmita8299, 3 months ago

what dream might the writer have in mind given that calls his poem 'Harlem'​

Answers

Answered by bhavanij0705
1

The title, “Harlem,” places the poem in this historically black and immigrant neighborhood in New York City, while the "dream" could be any dream that those in Harlem have had: a dream for a better life, for opportunity, for equality—most broadly, for access to the American Dream itself.

Answered by dayanandgoswami222
1

Explanation:

Langston Hughes wrote “Harlem” in 1951 as part of a book-length sequence, Montage of a Dream Deferred. Inspired by blues and jazz music, Montage, which Hughes intended to be read as a single long poem, explores the lives and consciousness of the black community in Harlem, and the continuous experience of racial injustice within this community. “Harlem” considers the harm that is caused when the dream of racial equality is continuously delayed. Ultimately, the poem suggests, society will have to reckon with this dream, as the dreamers claim what is rightfully their own.

Harlem Summary & Analysis

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Langston Hughes wrote “Harlem” in 1951 as part of a book-length sequence, Montage of a Dream Deferred. Inspired by blues and jazz music, Montage, which Hughes intended to be read as a single long poem, explores the lives and consciousness of the black community in Harlem, and the continuous experience of racial injustice within this community. “Harlem” considers the harm that is caused when the dream of racial equality is continuously delayed. Ultimately, the poem suggests, society will have to reckon with this dream, as the dreamers claim what is rightfully their own.

Read the full text of “Harlem”

“Harlem” Summary

The speaker asks what happens to a vision or hope of a community, when this vision or hope is continuously put off or delayed.

The speaker asks: will that dream wither away and shrivel up like fruit left out in the sun? Or will it putrefy like a painful, infected wound and then leak out pus? Will it smell disgusting, like meat that's gone bad? Or will it become like a gooey candy that gets all crusty and crystallized?

The speaker proposes a fifth possibility: that the unfulfilled dream will simply weigh the dreamers down as they have to continue to bear it.

Finally, the speaker offers a last alternative: maybe the dream will burst outward with energy and potency, demanding to be recognized and accounted for.

(aap ko hindi me bhi bta ta hu )

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