In 1953 African-American poet Langston Hughes began
corresponding with several South African writers variously
affiliated with the legendary "Drum" magazine. Published here for
the first time, these letters provide an invaluable glimpse into
the growing repression of South African apartheid and the slow but
painful progress of the American Civil Rights movement. Revealing a
fascinating set of transatlantic friendships between a titan of
American letters and a group of writers that includes Peter Clarke,
Todd Matshikiza, Bloke Modisane, Ezekiel Mphahlele, Peter Abrahams,
and Richard Rive, this volume highlights Hughes’s enormous
influence on the rise of English-language literature by black and
mixed-race writers in South Africa.
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