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Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance: Crash Course Literature 215

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  • čas přidán 15. 08. 2024
  • In which John Green teaches you about the poetry of Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes was a poet and playwright in the first half of the 20th century, and he was involved in the Harlem Renaissance, which was a cultural movement among African Americans of the time that produced all kinds of great works in literature, poetry, painting, sculpture, music, and other areas. The Harlem Renaissance mainly happened in Harlem, the traditionally black neighborhood in upper Manhattan in New York City. Langston Hughes was primarily known as a poet, but he was involved deeply in the movement itself as well. John will teach you a bit about Hughes's background, and he'll examine a few of his best-known poems.
    Learn more about Langston Hughes and the Harlem Renaissance in Episode #26 of Crash Course Black American History: • Arts and Letters of th...
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Komentáře • 609

  • @shessomickey
    @shessomickey Před 10 lety +592

    My first poetic love! A favorite poem of Hughes's:
    "Suicide's Note"
    The calm,
    Cool face of the river
    Asked me for a kiss

  • @4chalk
    @4chalk Před 10 lety +96

    "Dream Deferred" is one of my favorite poems. I read it in eighth grade and years later it remains quite fresh in my memory.

  • @Cal0Pat
    @Cal0Pat Před 10 lety +136

    Less plague. More jazz. Always a good recipe...

  • @sonnietrees4781
    @sonnietrees4781 Před 4 lety +36

    I like how African Americans had a say so in they're culture and spread they're art ,knowledge and love for life in they're poems,music and art.I'm glad the Harlem Renaissance occurred it spread for independence and strength for Black America.

  • @zoeynakya
    @zoeynakya Před 10 lety +17

    One of my fave poems by Langston Hughes is "Life For Me Ain't Been No Crystal Stairs'".
    Its quite universal since everyone has obstacles and hardships they have to overcome.

  • @Sartori
    @Sartori Před 9 lety +164

    "Much less plague and much more Jazz." XD

    • @manzijoel5224
      @manzijoel5224 Před 4 lety +6

      This line hits differeny in 2020!🤣😭

  • @bradsinger5062
    @bradsinger5062 Před 10 lety +15

    Hi i am 12 years old and live in South Carolina. I was introduced to you shows about six months ago and thought they were awesome. I watched world history and US history so often with using data that I cost my parents 75 dollars. Thanks a lot. Keep making more videos.

  • @MrHawaiiboy510
    @MrHawaiiboy510 Před 10 lety +495

    Awesome. I was named after Langston Hughes. 😊

  • @elliotecstasy3793
    @elliotecstasy3793 Před 8 lety +138

    tbh raisins are pretty terrible to begin with theyre just grape corpses

    • @MiamiPush2theLimit
      @MiamiPush2theLimit Před 8 lety +16

      Aren't grapes themselves corpses when disconnected from the plant which grew them?

    • @elliotecstasy3793
      @elliotecstasy3793 Před 8 lety +22

      +MiamiPush2theLimit then raisins are grape mummies

    • @zakkizer2490
      @zakkizer2490 Před 8 lety +9

      in the same way that eggs are chicken abortions

    • @LQOTW
      @LQOTW Před 5 lety

      "Graaaaaaapes!"

  • @iliakatster
    @iliakatster Před 10 lety +4

    The last place I expected a TF2 reference. Crash Course, you never cease to surprise me.

  • @GideonGleeful95
    @GideonGleeful95 Před 10 lety +114

    Suggestion for future Crash Course series: Music History.
    This series would chart the history of music from as far back as we know from around the world, noting how the political and social factors influenced music and vice versa, as well as how different genres intertwine and branch off. Although, I suggest you place a cut off date at 2010 or something as music is constantly evolving.

    • @nestof3
      @nestof3 Před 5 lety

      I’ve been enjoying MusicTV.

    • @alanivar2752
      @alanivar2752 Před 5 lety

      cutoff date 1990 at the latest

  • @nadiact-ie5hy
    @nadiact-ie5hy Před 10 lety +1

    And now I'm back from the movies. I didn't know quite where to put this, so I'll just write it here.
    Thank you, John, for The Fault in Our Stars. You've spoken in the past about creation as the act of making gifts for people. Well, your writing is a gift to me. And this movie was a gift as well. Thank you to all involved, but especially to you, John.
    When I left the theater, my first thought was how happy I am that I can tell this to you myself. That ability is a gift as well.
    Thank you.

  • @lacerniagigante
    @lacerniagigante Před 4 lety +3

    I lived 4 good years in the USA. Discovered Simple and learned so much true American English of the 30s and the 40s (nothing to do with movies) thanks to Langston Hughes.

  • @rhtuteur
    @rhtuteur Před 10 lety +30

    One of my favorite episodes of Crash Course Lit so far. The literary analysis was spot on and incredibly interesting. You may only have discussed two poems, but the depth and tenderness in which you did so was fabulous.

  • @erin3426
    @erin3426 Před 10 lety +25

    Love how John argues with himself sometimes as if someone else were actually there debating him.

  • @lasereyesstudios
    @lasereyesstudios Před 10 lety +2

    Funny this was posted today, because I just had my semester exam, and a portion of it was helping understand discrimination through Hughes poems, you've kinda opened up my appreciation to the poet. Good Job.

  • @theeblakester002
    @theeblakester002 Před 10 lety +1

    We were able to study Langston Hughes in English class this year and his body of work is just amazing. You just want to read all of his poems three times each at least to try to mine everything in them

  • @EagleKai
    @EagleKai Před 10 lety +2

    A few years back, a choir I was in performed a number of songs based off of Langston Hughes poems. Among my favorites from those were "Joy" and "New Moon". It's surprising how easily and how well they could be put to music.

  • @lordofduct
    @lordofduct Před 10 lety +5

    I knew who Langston Hughes was, but never actually heard someone speak his stuff, and know I was hearing it (some of it was familiar, but I never could put the author to the word).
    Thank you.
    I've been enjoying this series, but I've been enjoying it more as a "I remember reading that." Finally we got to a "oh, something I haven't really read."

  • @mirandasmith190
    @mirandasmith190 Před 8 lety +56

    Do you think that maybe you could make videos about writing essays and what not; I know that those kinds of thing are completely boring (trust me, I've seen tons of videos on it), but I believe that you would find a way to make it enjoyable. If you do decide to make videos on such, it would be highly appreciated and extremely helpful!

  • @_belgaldino
    @_belgaldino Před 8 lety +34

    I would love to have more videos about literature. When I start to work I'll contribute in patreon. You're awesome!

  • @solarnaut
    @solarnaut Před 7 lety

    "LIFE IS FOR THE LIVING" brought me here. I had long ago heard a speaker poignantly quoting an ill relative saying those words and they have echoed in my head all these years. I don't know if it was meant to be a quote from Langston Hughes snappy poem, but I'm glad to have found him!
    “Life is for the living. Death is for the dead. Let life be like music. And death a note unsaid.”

  • @mra4521
    @mra4521 Před 10 lety +6

    Hughes may predate the Civil Rights Movement, however, he does not predate the Years of Unreported Resistance.

  • @GFreeGamer
    @GFreeGamer Před 10 lety +18

    Have you thought of doing a review on Sing to the Dawn or The Clay Marble by Minfong Ho? They both address issues of poverty and gender in the contexts of religion and education (Sing to the Dawn), and war (The Clay Marble). It would be great to see Crash Course look into Asian authors or works set in Asian cultures.

  • @DiabloJaz12
    @DiabloJaz12 Před 9 lety

    As a young man of 17 years, I can say that I relate with Langston Hughes in his use of language. He takes dark prophecies and presents them in the form of innocent children's nursery rhymes, he can go from speaking in the manners of an oracle or a sage, to speaking in the local tone of those who were around him. When I write poetry, I write in the tone of the Renaissance man, staring outside his window and into the endless blue for inspiration. But amidst my South Florida companions, I keep it real and talk as would be expected of me. This is what I personally call, "The Poet's Tone." A time and place where we leave our "normal" selves and take the role of the rogue scholar whose kinsmen and compatriots mock him for simply being him.

  • @AllisonGreener_
    @AllisonGreener_ Před 9 lety +34

    You should do somthing with "The Things They Carried"

    • @spaceacekaitlin333
      @spaceacekaitlin333 Před 7 lety +3

      Alli I read that a couple weeks ago in my literature class! Loved it and the symbolism!

  • @samantha5719
    @samantha5719 Před 10 lety +9

    John, Thank you so much for writing The Fault in Our Stars! Your work is beautiful and your book made me ball my eyes out! (That's a compliment.) No other book has ever made me cry. (And I have nerves of steal...or did.) I love your work, never stop writing stories. (Yes, I plan to see the movie.)

  • @ThePaperFlowers
    @ThePaperFlowers Před 10 lety +4

    I like how at the phrase "the mountain," you showed a picture of...The Mountain. A+ GoT plugs.

  • @tyroneslothdrop9155
    @tyroneslothdrop9155 Před 10 lety +80

    Congratulations, John Green. You're film is certified fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. I'm glad to see that success can still come to those who deserve it. Just don't go too Hollywood and sell out your Crash Course audience.

    • @Yonteez
      @Yonteez Před 10 lety +8

      Really? The film did well? This is fucking awesome?

    • @tyroneslothdrop9155
      @tyroneslothdrop9155 Před 10 lety +8

      John Green beat Tom Cruise.
      boxofficemojo.com/news/?id=3855&p=.htm

    • @LQOTW
      @LQOTW Před 5 lety

      @@tyroneslothdrop9155 And, really, who wouldn't like to do that?

  • @TheOnceandFutureGeek
    @TheOnceandFutureGeek Před 10 lety +1

    I know time constraints make it impossible to mention everything that might be pertinent to Hughes, but I thought it worth noting that "Harlem" is actually "Harlem [2]" and just one PART of a much larger book-length poem, /Montage of a Dream Deferred/ (published in 1951). Hughes goes out of his way to make sure that /Montage/ is viewed as a single unit in his preface to the book. The other poems that John mentions in relation to the book are also parts of the whole. In that context, "deferred" takes on a very different meaning; it's featured throughout the book, builds to a climax in the poem "Deferred", and then continually referenced until the end, placing everything ---the good and the bad as presented by Hughes--- in the context of that deferred "dream" of equality and a better life. It's also very important to keep the context of the rest of the poem in mind when reading poems like "Harlem [2]" because themes like war and the questions presented in "Freedom Train" really cast a very different light on the lives of the people who speak in /Montage/.
    /Montage/ as a whole is a work of rhythmic and poetic genius that combines musical structure and rhythm (mostly jazz & blues but also classical techniques), theme repetition, and the manipulation of language to form something that is as much a musical/linguistic experience as it is a literary one. I'm not going to address the themes in this comment because I could literally write a 15 page paper on it (and have) but the fact that you can't get it as a standalone volume like it was first intended when Hughes had it printed is a sad statement about the American canon and how it still treats non-white writers. If you can get your hands on it in the original order, I highly suggest it (I was lucky enough to get access through my English department). If not, which is more likely, there are anthologies of Hughes' poetry that includes most of /Montage of a Dream Deferred/, but sometimes they rearrange the order of the parts and remove others.
    Either way, I also suggest listening to a lot of jazz/blues and read up on the history of the time period and place that he was writing about when you do. /Montage/ is still very relevant to modern issues but much of the language and references used will make better sense with at least a loose grasp of early 20th century history on hand. It's one of my favorite poems and really believe it should be assigned reading for everybody in school.

  • @brooklynclarke578
    @brooklynclarke578 Před 4 lety +2

    2:04 LOL! The Bodyguard reference has me goneeee 😭

  • @prezdabeast6264
    @prezdabeast6264 Před 10 lety

    When I was in AP English, we had to memorize a poem of 14 lines or more and recite it for the class, and being the politically aware speechie I was, I decided to do "Let America Be America Again." It's stuck with me since, and watching this gives me an even greater appreciation for the poet.

  • @ZygoChris
    @ZygoChris Před 10 lety +1

    Best show ever, and this one on one of the authors I wrote about in my thesis at university was very pleasant. I thank you J. Green and Crash Course Crew !

  • @oreochunk13
    @oreochunk13 Před 10 lety +4

    Inshaallah will be doing thesis paper on him. Thanks john green.

  • @s02229
    @s02229 Před 10 lety

    I'm still waiting Patiently for the next episode of Crash Course Literature, I have watched each if the existing ones over five times, I just love these, I hope it's gonna be here soon

  • @koldkraftm8getready259
    @koldkraftm8getready259 Před 4 lety +4

    Anyone else spot the TF2 reference in 0:46?

  • @benjamincarter2335
    @benjamincarter2335 Před 10 lety +1

    This series is brilliant. I hope to one day see one on Hemingway. Maybe "The Sun Also Rises," or "For Whom the Bell Tolls."

  • @aaronhill4353
    @aaronhill4353 Před 10 lety +3

    Man Hughes was so great. He didn't get bogged down and defensive about rhyme like Frost. I'd put him way above Frost. Second only to Whitman.

  • @aperson22222
    @aperson22222 Před 10 lety +9

    Goddamned Mountain. I saw that. I've been mourning Oberyn all week.

  • @MoonGoddessArtemis
    @MoonGoddessArtemis Před 10 lety

    So I know that this is not on topic, but John Green, you need to iron your shirts!
    Having gotten that off my chest, I'd like to say "Thank you!" for doing Crash Course and exploring literature and poetry. It's so great to see such content online especially since I personally don't feel I got to experience enough literature in my school years. And you do an awesome job of explaining things in short installments. :)

  • @tazomazopazo
    @tazomazopazo Před 10 lety

    A Dream Deferred is my favorite poem of all time. And not because of its language or rhythm, but because of the sentiment. What happens to a dream deferred? It often explodes. At the time I decided that this was my favorite poem, that dream was far from lofty; I wanted a guitar. But I managed to get myself a guitar, and the sentiment still stands

  • @imadethiscuziwsbored
    @imadethiscuziwsbored Před 9 lety +1

    Haha I find it kinda cool that the previous weeks video was on Beloved and this week Langston Hughes as those are the two subjects my IOC for the International Baccalaureate english test are on xD

  • @hendrixinfinity3992
    @hendrixinfinity3992 Před 10 lety

    Your point at 7:00, that it is extraordinary that a poet should take that little time to write a poem is perhaps not taking into account one of the greatest unifying factors in modernism. Kerouac claimed to invent it but it certainly goes back further. Spontaneous prose (or poetry) just flows out of you like a river and if you try to stem the tide you risk distorting or losing the central points. Poetry written quickly does not mean poetry written hastily.

  • @franciscozenhapreto5695
    @franciscozenhapreto5695 Před 10 lety +8

    Please do one about Brave New World by Huxley. It's an incredible book and I can't get it out of my head. 1984 by Orwell is great too, but as i read BNW first it blew my mind.

  • @OrUptotheStars
    @OrUptotheStars Před 10 lety

    I love Langston Hughes's poetry. My favorite is "I, Too Sing America."

  • @elsalolz
    @elsalolz Před 10 lety

    After watching this, I can't wait to read some Langston Hughes. I'm fascinated by the era.

  • @hana-dul-set
    @hana-dul-set Před 7 lety +18

    why didnt i watched this before my midterm :"(

  • @jackmalik.projekrabak
    @jackmalik.projekrabak Před 8 lety +35

    Please do Beat Generation!!

  • @George59883
    @George59883 Před 10 lety

    The Absolutely True Diary of A Part Time Indian should be one of the next books you do. I love this crash course.

    • @ksaed2497
      @ksaed2497 Před 10 lety +1

      A thousand times yes yes yes.

  • @beautyincmajor1714
    @beautyincmajor1714 Před 8 lety +6

    I love you John Green! ❤️

  • @veronicagdowning
    @veronicagdowning Před 7 lety

    Crash Course was made necessary by my history teacher, which is awesome, by the way. I've loved your shows. But it seems that you were particularly touched by the writing of my favorite poet Langston Hughes. It's nice to see that you feel so moved by his poetry.

  • @Monchele4Ever
    @Monchele4Ever Před 10 lety

    I have a test about his poem 'As I Grew Older' next week. This helped me so much! Thank you!

  • @witchsistah
    @witchsistah Před 9 lety +16

    37 people have had no lovin' in between.

  • @scotx1307
    @scotx1307 Před 10 lety

    I love Hughes' "A Dream Deferred". He was such a great poet. Writing a poem in 10-15 minutes doesn't surprise me, especially from someone of his talent. I would do it in high school and turn them into my English teach for review. I'm not comparing myself to Hughes, just saying when the muse strikes, sometimes she hits hard.

  • @troberts1
    @troberts1 Před 10 lety

    This was posted yesterday and there are NO comments? I'm going to assume this is a glitch. Thank you, John, for introducing me to yet another fascinating person I should be reading.

  • @oliveoil514
    @oliveoil514 Před 10 lety

    I love that i have to watch this for homework and get quizzed on it when i already watch these for pure enjoyment

  • @brumagemm
    @brumagemm Před 10 lety

    The Sky Above the Roof
    -Ralph Vaughan Williams (I almost misattributed this to Langston Hughes, but I already typed it all out so you're getting it anyway)
    The sky above the roof is calm and sweet.
    A branch above the roof bends in the heat.
    A bell from out the blue drowsily rings.
    A bird from out the blue plaintively sings.
    Ah God! A life is here, simple and fair.
    Murmurs of strife are here, lost in the air
    Why dost thou weep, O heart, poured out in tears?
    What hast thou done, O heart, in thy spent years?

    • @nadiact-ie5hy
      @nadiact-ie5hy Před 10 lety

      Hi. This is actually a translation of a poem by the French poet Paul Verlaine. (I sang a setting of this poem by Reynaldo Hahn called D'Une Prison on my last recital.)

  • @victoriasimon263
    @victoriasimon263 Před 6 lety

    I have read some of Langston Hughes poetry, such as "A Dream Deferred" and "Rent" , etc. I totally agree with you that even though the language is simple it has a deeper meaning reading between the lines. Thank You for sharing this content.

  • @AnnikaRosesmith
    @AnnikaRosesmith Před 10 lety

    OMG. Thank you! John... I watched tfios yesterday and I died. I am just thinking about it and it's just amazing. You are such a talented writer and keep doing it!

  • @stevenwills4660
    @stevenwills4660 Před 10 lety +13

    good morning John
    Can you do an "open letter to English teachers"?

  • @jackdoran4639
    @jackdoran4639 Před 9 lety +17

    Wow the poem 'Harlem' is so relevant to the riots in Baltimore and Ferguson
    p.s. next season - Allen Ginsberg please?

  • @trinity9738
    @trinity9738 Před rokem +1

    Crash course is awesome. Your courses made homeschooling more enjoyable for my kids.

  • @elliotanaya7200
    @elliotanaya7200 Před 10 lety

    As a poet, I would very much love to see a whole crash course poetry specifically. That would be super cool.

  • @HurdlingPoet
    @HurdlingPoet Před 10 lety +2

    Such a good episode. Thank you for the history, humor, and analysis. I am inspired.

  • @dorothygale9648
    @dorothygale9648 Před 10 lety

    That last poem inspired a play I read in high school called 'A Raisin in the Sun.' You should check it out if you like that kind of thing.

  • @nadiact-ie5hy
    @nadiact-ie5hy Před 10 lety +4

    Can anyone suggest any essential Langston Hughes collections?
    Off to see TFiOS! Hooray!!!

  • @Toastwig
    @Toastwig Před 10 lety +4

    Wow please do more poetry this was fascinating. Especially T.S.Eliot, I could use some help figuring out what he's saying haha

  • @Alchemydude667
    @Alchemydude667 Před 10 lety +3

    To the stage, to Uta, to Buddha,Pablo Neruda, too. (Wow this might just be the most obscure reference I have ever made in my life)

  • @Julathegreat
    @Julathegreat Před 10 lety +1

    Here is John Green, doing a season of Crash Course literature. I feel like there is a great opportunity in here somewhere - for instance, there's a book called "The Fault in Our Stars" that we'd have a rare opportunity to see if an author did an essay and examination of their own work. I'd like to see it.

  • @0scill8r
    @0scill8r Před 6 lety

    If theres one moment in time america was truly great, it would have to be the hope and creativity thriving during the harlem renaissance. I read into him quite a bit in the previous months and am now recording and mixing a full length album. realizing how much my hopes reflect the explosiveness of his sermons is really something. simple, operative and vernacularized poetry is the way to go, that epic reality of the american dream must be captured. whoever mentione ginsberg, they were right about somethings, but they were stirring for the truth compared to the dawn of the jazz age.

  • @noahqb2112
    @noahqb2112 Před 10 lety

    I was so excited when I realized I had already read "A Dream Deferred". I feel like a well read scholar.

  • @xavier.mauricio
    @xavier.mauricio Před 10 lety

    Harlem and I Too are so freaking fantastic. I ought to buy a Langston Hughes anthology one of these days.

  • @Alverant
    @Alverant Před 10 lety +8

    Why does all the good poetry happen when the poet is depressed? When I was in middle school the only poem I wrote that got into the anthology was one about death I wrote when I was sad.

    • @Moose6960
      @Moose6960 Před 10 lety +9

      Maybe it's because sadness can be such a complicated emotion. I too found that I was more productive and effective in my poetry writing when dealing with personal problems, even though almost none of my poems were about the problem. Maybe it's because when we're sad, focusing on making beautiful art helps to put the sad away for a while.

    • @Grayhome
      @Grayhome Před 10 lety +2

      There's something in me that really does not want to believe that sadness is more conducive to good art and poetry than other emotions. I think any heightened emotion can provide inspiration -- sadness, joy, fear, rage... you name it.

    • @Xenoneb
      @Xenoneb Před 10 lety +5

      "Happy families are all alike; every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way."
      -Leo Tolstoy
      Negative emotions are very complex, unlike positive emotions. So art, which by its nature is complex, has to be about negative emotions, on the most part.

    • @Grayhome
      @Grayhome Před 10 lety +2

      I disagree. I think joy can be just as complex and artistically compelling as sadness.

    • @Grayhome
      @Grayhome Před 10 lety

      Xenoneb I disagree. I think joy can be just as complex and artistically compelling as sadness. There is nothing simple about any emotions, positive or negative.

  • @twohooks3533
    @twohooks3533 Před 10 lety

    Oh Man! This would have come in handy for my final IB English exam. Hughes was our topic :).

  • @magicalmalu
    @magicalmalu Před 6 lety

    I love these videos please make them forever I am an English major and I need them thank you.

  • @emilyhughes4798
    @emilyhughes4798 Před 10 lety

    So I realize this isn't the type of literary observation you wanted me to draw from this video... but you just said my last name so many times. It was beautiful. :)

  • @JamesYee
    @JamesYee Před 10 lety

    Breaking down writings into it's parts and methods both interests and annoys me. I seem to bounce between loving and loathing of this practice as my life waxes and wanes. In the end I think the teacher helps a lot, so thanks for being awesome.

  • @bugoftheleaves
    @bugoftheleaves Před 10 lety

    as far as writing the first poem john read (i've known rivers) and it being writing in minutes on a train...there are some places, like trains that seem to exist only to pull out moments of creativity.

  • @spencercheung6304
    @spencercheung6304 Před 6 lety

    The first time I read his poem was in Chinese textbook, my middle school teacher failed to explain it. He told us Hughes was homesick. 😫😩

  • @Tzadeck
    @Tzadeck Před 10 lety +4

    I must admit that if I were to request a book in this course... it would be Lolita. Do it!

  • @darrenwilson2461
    @darrenwilson2461 Před 6 lety

    Love Langston Hughes. If you want to read another great African American poet read J.G. Finche's work.

  • @lizkasper
    @lizkasper Před 10 lety

    John, WHERE were you when I was in high school?! (Well, you were just out of high school, actually.) Thank you for reminding me to think broadly and imagine others complexly. :-)

  • @livingwithsophia6304
    @livingwithsophia6304 Před 7 lety

    Hi,
    I have a question concerning the poem "Theme for English B", if anyone have an idea : feel free to let me know! By the end of the poem, the speaker mentions that perhaps his teacher does not want to be a part of him. So far, we can guess that the teacher would not like to be a part of him because of the discrimination/ racism the speaker has to bear. However, the speaker mentions that neither him (often) would not like to be a part of the teacher. Somehow, he emphasizes that his teacher is white, therefore, he has more freedom. Then, why the speaker would not like to be a part of him, while he seems to envy his freedom. Would you say that it is a sense of pride of his culture ? According to his biography, Hughes was mostly raised by his grandmother, who gave him a sense of racial pride. Would that make sense? Any other ideas?

  • @karun_vv7190
    @karun_vv7190 Před 6 měsíci

    Who knew you actually made me more interested in these topics ..

  • @thebaseballcardguru
    @thebaseballcardguru Před 10 lety +4

    I like the TF2 reference when you mentioned classes.

    • @gascan7333
      @gascan7333 Před 4 lety

      thebaseballcardguru And the Bioshock reference at “daddy”

  • @demetriotorres1933
    @demetriotorres1933 Před 5 lety

    I'm disappointed in these comments. John Green made a bioshock and family guy reference in the same video and nobody commented about it. i love him

  • @Alverant
    @Alverant Před 10 lety +8

    Will there ever be another science fiction or fantasy novel in CC Lit? We had Frankenstein but I'd like more. Maybe talk about Heinlein or Asimov or Pratchett...

    • @headrockbeats
      @headrockbeats Před 10 lety +5

      I wonder if any literature class anywhere has ever been assigned to read "Dune". That would be a great way to blow open a fresh young mind.

    • @RedMenace446
      @RedMenace446 Před 10 lety +2

      what about Clarke?

    • @theeblakester002
      @theeblakester002 Před 10 lety +4

      Or Phillip K. Dick? He seems like a good intro-author to sci-fi. I'm not a sci-fi expert though.

    • @alicerchalk
      @alicerchalk Před 10 lety

      Or what about War of the Worlds?

    • @headrockbeats
      @headrockbeats Před 10 lety +1

      Alice Chalkley
      Welles is quite literally the definitive author that should already have appeared on Crash Course but hasn't. And like I mentioned recently in a comment, Orwell's "1984" is a very common high-school literature course book, is still very relevant today, and is a masterpiece that should never be skipped... But apparently, "Things Fall Apart" is more important. Somehow.

  • @hahaha123456789ish
    @hahaha123456789ish Před 10 lety

    Dear John Green and Crash Course! Seeing as you have finished World History, US History and soon lots of literature episodes, you guys should do Crash Course Philosophy! Can you imagine John Green talking about and having Thought Bubbles on Plato, Kant, Nietzsche, Rousseau, Locke, and Machiavelli?!?!? That would be sooooo AWESOME! DFTBA. Sincerely, an avid fan.

  • @TheQueerTailor
    @TheQueerTailor Před 10 lety

    What I wouldn't give to meet Langston Hughs or frankly just to dance in Harlem in the 1920s :)

  • @symbiosister
    @symbiosister Před 10 lety +1

    I'm reading Anna Kerenina right now and I think it would be awesome if you did an episode on it

  • @raeleong2009
    @raeleong2009 Před 10 lety

    How about a video on the literature of the Beat Generation? Specifically to provide us students some context for Kerouac's On the Road?

  • @karenjess4938
    @karenjess4938 Před 10 lety +2

    You, sir, are very cool. Never thought that I could learn so much about the Harlem Renaissance in one video. Also going to see TFIOS tomorrow... YESSS

  • @brwneyedgirlx19
    @brwneyedgirlx19 Před 10 lety

    John Green, the sass. Such impressive sass.

  • @sarahfoster2242
    @sarahfoster2242 Před 10 lety +4

    "aand the other ninja turtles....?" Love it.
    (I mean, I loved the rest of the video too.. you know, smart things. but Ninja Turtles!)

  • @VideoNozoki
    @VideoNozoki Před 10 lety +3

    Thank you John.
    I really love your Crash Course Literature series.

  • @yungsloth8336
    @yungsloth8336 Před 10 lety +9

    Wow that's a first, I think. When they read the article thingy, "classes" mentioned all the Team Fortress 2 classes! :D (I'm such a nerd... >.

    • @brandtlucasbrandt
      @brandtlucasbrandt Před 10 lety +2

      There are a lot of TF2 references in the History Course he did.

    • @yungsloth8336
      @yungsloth8336 Před 10 lety

      If that's sarcasm find it yourself you dingus lol

    • @brandtlucasbrandt
      @brandtlucasbrandt Před 10 lety +2

      I remember, they made a rocket jumping reference and they use the ammo crates from TF2.

    • @yungsloth8336
      @yungsloth8336 Před 10 lety

      ah, okay *puts gun down* I really thought you were being sarcastic lol

    • @brandtlucasbrandt
      @brandtlucasbrandt Před 10 lety +2

      YOU WERE GOING TO SHOOT ME?!! Meh, we can put our differences aside. for science. You monster.

  • @aintitquaint1307
    @aintitquaint1307 Před 10 lety

    I'm amazed by all the stuff you manage to pull out of one short poem. How does one learn to analyze poems like this? Is it simply reading a lot of poetry, or is it more than that?

  • @Daybed4448
    @Daybed4448 Před 10 lety

    Pretty please can we do some Beat Generation poetry? There's so much to talk about with Ginsberg and Kerouac...

  • @crashcourse
    @crashcourse  Před 10 lety +54

    Langston Hughes & the Harlem Renaissance: Crash Course Literature 215

    • @e.b.228
      @e.b.228 Před 10 lety +4

      Please do Lord of the Flies

    • @TheFireflyGrave
      @TheFireflyGrave Před 10 lety +1

      If I may mangle a metaphor; I'd say Langston Hughes was the Master Splinter of the Harlem Renaissance.

    • @bpine20
      @bpine20 Před 10 lety

      Do something by Franz Kafka, please.

    • @snowflake2282828
      @snowflake2282828 Před 10 lety +3

      CrashCourse Will you ever have a video about Russian literature?

    • @jimblesnotronbo507
      @jimblesnotronbo507 Před 10 lety

      Brother Corn
      Wheres the ref. at, im not able to find it.

  • @RinoaL
    @RinoaL Před 10 lety +29

    2:17 i see Nicolas Cage wearing a funny mustache.......