Not Without Laughter
Not Without Laughter is the debut novel by Langston Hughes published in 1930.
Plot introduction
Not Without Laughter portrays African-American life in Kansas in the 1910s, focusing on the effects of class and religion on the community.[1] The main storyline focuses on Sandy's "awakening to the sad and the beautiful realities of black life in a small Kansas town."[citation needed]
Characters
- James "Sandy" Rodgers
- Jimboy Rodgers – Sandy's father, Annjee's husband
- Annjelica "Annjee" Rodgers – Sandy's mother, wife of Jimboy
- Aunt Hager Williams – Annjee's mother and Sandy's grandmother
- Tempy Siles/Williams – Annjee's sister
- Mr. Siles – Tempy's husband
- Harriett Williams – sister of Annjee
- Maudel Smothers – friend of Harriett
- Willie-Mae Johnson – friend of Sandy
Background
Hughes said that Not Without Laughter is semi-autobiographical, and that a good portion of the characters and setting included in the novel are based on his memories of growing up in Lawrence, Kansas: "I wanted to write about a typical Negro family in the Middle West, about people like those I had known in Kansas. But mine was not a typical Negro family."[2]
Reception
A review in the New York Times on August 3, 1930 stated: " "Not Without Laughter" is very slow, even tedious, reading in its early chapters, but once it gains its momentum it moves as swiftly as a jazz rhythm. Its characters, emerging ever more clearly and challenging as the novel proceeds, gives it this rhythm. Every character in the novel, it can be said, with the exception of Tempy and Mr. Siles, is a living challenge to our civilization, a challenge that is all the more effective because it springs naturally out of its materials and is not superimposed upon them."[3]
References
- ^ Moss, Joyce; Wilson, George (1997). "Not Without Laughter". Literature and its Times:Profiles of 300 Notable Literary Works and the Historical Events that Influenced Them. Vol. 3. Detroit: Gale.
- ^ Hughes, Langston (1963). The Big Sea, an Autobiography. New York: Hill and Wang. p. 303.
- ^ "'Not Without Laughter' and Other Recent Fiction". The New York Times. 3 August 1930.
- v
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- e
- "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" (1921)
- "Mother to Son" (1922)
- "I, Too" (1925)
- "The Weary Blues" (1926)
- "Pierrot" (1926)
- "Come to the Waldorf Astoria" (1931)
- "Let America be America Again" (1938)
- "Note on Commercial Theatre" (1940)
- "Harlem" (1951)
- "Mississippi–1955" (1955)
- Fine Clothes to the Jew (poems, 1927)
- The Ways of White Folks (short stories, 1934)
- Montage of a Dream Deferred (poems 1951)
- Mule Bone (1931)
- Mulatto (1935)
- Street Scene (1947)
- Tambourines to Glory (1956)
- Black Nativity (1961)
- Jerico-Jim Crow (1964)
- Not Without Laughter (1930)
- The Sweet Flypaper of Life (1955)
- Way Down South (1939)
- Carrie Langston Hughes (mother)
- Charles Henry Langston (grandfather)
- John Mercer Langston (great uncle)
- Langston Hughes Society
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