Langston''s Salvation: American Religion and the Bard of Harlem
ISBN: 9781479864799
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / NYU Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter
Subjects: Religion ; Language & Literature;

Best, a professor of religion and African-American studies at Princeton, highlights an often overlooked aspect of Langston Hughes, the Bard of Harlem: his views on religion. The book explores the religious nuances in Hughes's prolific literary career, which spanned decades and genres and had both explicit and implicit religious content. In doing so, Best explains where the notion that Hughes was an atheist began (particularly in the work of Walter E. Hawkins) and then contends that, though Hughes fervently avoided joining a particular congregation, he was a "thinker about religion" if not a "religious thinker." Best weaves together the varied and often controversial strands of Hughes's life-an unsuccessful religious conversion, progressive politics, and an intriguing but doomed trip to Russia to create a film-in order to paint a more complete picture of a nonconformist and his modern relationship with religion. With a functional but sometimes plodding style, Best provides ample context for a more intricate interpretation of Hughes' stance on God using examples and referencing the work of other scholars to slowly build his arguments from the ground up. This is a well-researched argument that offers a vivid perspective on a literary giant for scholars to consider. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Wallace D. Best is Professor of Religion and African American Studies at Princeton University. He is the author of Passionately Human, No Less Divine: Religion and Culture in Black Chicago, 1915-1952 (Princeton Univeristy Press, 2005 ) and Langston's Salvation: American Religion and the Bard of Harlem (NYU Press, 2017), winner of the 2018 Award for Excellence in the Study of Religion in Textual Studies, presented by the American Academy of Religion.
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