Book contents
- Langston Hughes in Context
- Langston Hughes in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Singing America
- Part II The Global Langston Hughes
- Chapter 12 Langston Hughes and the Haitian Revolution
- Chapter 13 Taking Louise Bennett Seriously
- Chapter 14 Langston Hughes and Mexico
- Chapter 15 Langston Hughes in Spain
- Chapter 16 Langston Hughes in Cuba and South America
- Chapter 17 Langston Hughes, Colonialism, and Decolonization
- Chapter 18 Langston Hughes and Cultural Diplomacy
- Chapter 19 Langston Hughes in the Soviet Union
- Chapter 20 Translating Blackness
- Chapter 21 Langston Hughes and the Shanghai Jazz Scene
- Chapter 22 Langston Hughes’s Short Fiction in 1930s Korea
- Part III Afterlives
- Index
Chapter 21 - Langston Hughes and the Shanghai Jazz Scene
from Part II - The Global Langston Hughes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2022
- Langston Hughes in Context
- Langston Hughes in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Part I Singing America
- Part II The Global Langston Hughes
- Chapter 12 Langston Hughes and the Haitian Revolution
- Chapter 13 Taking Louise Bennett Seriously
- Chapter 14 Langston Hughes and Mexico
- Chapter 15 Langston Hughes in Spain
- Chapter 16 Langston Hughes in Cuba and South America
- Chapter 17 Langston Hughes, Colonialism, and Decolonization
- Chapter 18 Langston Hughes and Cultural Diplomacy
- Chapter 19 Langston Hughes in the Soviet Union
- Chapter 20 Translating Blackness
- Chapter 21 Langston Hughes and the Shanghai Jazz Scene
- Chapter 22 Langston Hughes’s Short Fiction in 1930s Korea
- Part III Afterlives
- Index
Summary
This chapter explores Hughes’s historic visit to Shanghai in 1933 and his encounter with the reverberating Shanghai jazz scene in the interwar era. It situates Hughes’s account of his trip in I Wonder as I Wander (1956) during the Bandung period, examining Hughes’s subsequent response to Afro-Asian engagements with the language of jazz. Against the overarching premise of Afro-Asian solidarity, music in Hughes’s work becomes an alternative site of politics, simultaneously conveying Bandung-era optimism and the limits of Afro-Asian solidarity underpinned by the nation-state and its racial categories. Music in Hughes’s world as practice metaphorically sensitizes the many nuances of interracial dynamics, that is, Sino-Japanese tension, in ways that necessitate reconfiguration of the global color line.
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- Langston Hughes in Context , pp. 223 - 231Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022