Revisit This Harlem Renaissance Icon

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Danez Smith is curated, langston Hughes’s stereo blues

This collection was just released in November, and the reason I recommend it before the other fuse collection is that it is another queer black poet, which counts myself as a literary descendant of the fuse. Because it is curated by Smith. They introduce their experience in the fuse’s work, and how they have led them to the path to be a poet. After that, they briefly explain the importance and impact of fuse works for not only black Americans, but also the entire Canon in the United States. The fuse wrote back the history and dignity of those who had been rejected at the time. He summoned the river to our ancestors and attached a jazz notebook to his line.

In the era of fuse in Harlem, Smith wrote: “The harem of the fuse is a wild, strange and affectionate chick of the black artist, each of which is talented, and each recognizes the possibility that the world will be broken. Hughes lived. It is felt in poetry.

Reading the context provided by Smith gives more weight to the collected poems. This includes the unfinished work released from the formation of fuse carriers. If you want to know more about the project, Smith will talk more about their process in this conversation Liberation person.

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