MEdia LIbrArY

Emancipated Slaves Brought from Louisiana by Colonel George H. Banks, December 1863 albumen silver print by Myron H. Kimball (active 1860s). (Public domain via metmuseum.org)
Family & Community
Langston Hughes’s famous “Mother to Son” is a poem of intergenerational understanding. Direct and accessible, Hughes’s poem nonetheless displays a doubleness, in that we’re given a son recounting, in the mother’s voice, what his mother once said to him. It’s powerfully generous to the mother, but it also admits something about the son’s knowledge that has come from the mother. A poem of mother-wit, a poem about passing along knowledge, it’s also a poem of metaphor. It’s not a straight line. The poem’s concluding line (also given at the beginning), “life for me ain’t been no crystal stair,” may seem straightforward, but we should hear it communicating resilience and a kind of resistance that is rooted in womanhood. The poem is both about resistance and about family as a kind of safe haven: it looks inward, but also looks outward. It drops the veil: it is given in the voice of someone else—a leap into the consciousness of another—but it isn’t speaking for that person. A lesser poet would have written a poem to say, “This is what Black mothers experience,” or “This is what family does.” Hughes, instead, enacts the experience: the telling is part of the testifying in the poem. — From the essay by Kevin Young
⌯ Theme Description
READ More

Family & Community

After Fear and Raging, with Toi Derricotte

View

Ashley C. Ford: “Adoration” by Kelly Stacy

View

Nicole Sealey: “Object Permanence”

View

Home to Harlem Talks: Gwendolyn Bennett

View

Nicole Sealey Poetry Reading at JMU

View

Nikki Giovanni at the Schomburg: “A Good Cry”

View

Furious Flower Presents Gregory Pardlo

View

Mothers of Boys

View

Ross Gay: Catalog of Unabashed Gratitudes

View

Dawn Lundy Martin at Furious Flower

View

Wanda Coleman: Requiem for a Nest

View

LaTasha N. Nevada Diggs: A Hip Hop Villanelle

View

Joy Katz and Erika Meitner: Happy Complicated Mother’s Day

View

Terrance Hayes: “Arbor for Butch”

View

Midwestern Blues, with Kevin Young

View

Featured