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Hughes’s references to the dream run like a leitmotif (a recurring idea) through the poem. It is announced in Line 2, about America: “Let it be the dream it used to be.” This is echoed in Line 6: “Let America be the dream the dreamers dreamed.” Many of the dreamers were immigrants who “dreamt our basic dream” (Line 39) while still in the Old World and were inspired to come to America, the new land that was being built (and dreamed). The emphasis of the dream is the hope for freedom and prosperity; it is a “mighty dream” (Line 69) that lives on in the nation’s psyche and must be revived.
Although Hughes does not actually put the two words directly together, he is referring to the American dream. This is a term that only came into common usage in 1931, after it appeared in the work of an American historian named James Truslow Adams in his book The Epic of America. However, the American dream can really be traced back to the nation’s founding documents, including the Declaration of Independence, in which humankind’s “unalienable rights” are declared to be “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
By Langston Hughes
Children’s Rhymes
Langston Hughes
Cora Unashamed
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Dreams
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Harlem
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I look at the world
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I, Too
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Me and the Mule
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Mother to Son
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Mulatto
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Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life
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Not Without Laughter
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Slave on the Block
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Thank You, M'am
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The Big Sea
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Theme for English B
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The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain
Langston Hughes
The Negro Speaks of Rivers
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The Ways of White Folks
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The Weary Blues
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Tired
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African American Literature
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American Literature
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Books on Justice & Injustice
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Books on U.S. History
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Contemporary Books on Social Justice
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Equality
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Harlem Renaissance
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Required Reading Lists
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