Everything you need to understand or teach
Countee Cullen.
Products may contain comprehensive summaries, analysis, notes, articles, essays,
lesson plans and more. See below for details on what is included.
Countee Cullen
Born May 30, 1903
Most sources say Louisville, Kentucky
Died January 9, 1946
New York, New York
American poet, novelist, and dramatist
Countee Cullen. (The Bettmann Archive/Corbis-...
Read more
Cullen, Countee (1903-1946)
Among the most conservative of the Harlem Renaissance poets, Harvard educated Countee Cullen exploded onto the New York literary scene with the publication of Color (1925) ...
Read more
Biography EssayCountee Cullen became a central figure in the Harlem or New Negro Renaissance and in American poetry in general with the publication of his first book, Color (1925), which black and wh...
Read more
The American Countee Cullen (1903-1946) was one of the most widely heralded African American poets of the Harlem renaissance, though he was less concerned with social and political problems than were ...
Read more
Born Countee Leroy Porter on 30 May 1903, Countee Cullen was orphaned while still a child and subsequently adopted, though the relationship was never made legal, by Frederick Asbury Cullen. While an a...
Read more
Countee Cullen became a central figure in the Harlem or New Negro Renaissance and in American poetry in general with the publication of his first book, Color (1925), which black and white critics hail...
Read more
If any single writer can be said to represent the New Negro Renaissance, that extraordinary flowering of Afro-American arts centered in Harlem in the 1920s, that writer is almost certainly Countee Cul...
Read more
In the following review, Deutsch asserts that Color represents the voice of the African-American people and declares Cullen a poet with great potential.
These lyrics [Color] by the youngest of the Neg...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Bontemps contrasts Cullen with Langston Hughes, a fellow Harlem Renaissance poet, and offers a reminiscence of Cullen that subsequently became under-quoted.
New books of poem...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Reimherr argues that race is thematically central to Cullen's poetry.
The theme of race consciousness is one of several themes that run through the poetry of Countee C...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Dorsey argues that Cullen often invented the circumstances of Greek myths when incorporating them into his poetry in order to create irony and to achieve originality.
In The ...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Collier cites Cullen's "From the Dark Tower" as a poem that expresses "the spirit of the Harlem Renaissance."
Literary historians and criti...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Smylie analyzes Cullen's poem "The Black Christ."
Cullen was not the first to relate crucifixion and lynching, nor did he compose his song ["The B...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Smith comments on Cullen's use of the sonnet as a vehicle for protest.
To more than one commentator on the poetry of the Harlem Renaissance, the central paradox of the...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Shucard argues that Cullen naturally created race dominated poetry despite his intellectual intent to place artistry above all other concerns.
It is a peculiar sensation, th...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Lomax alleges that Cullen's attitude toward race ultimately stunted his artistic development
Color and Cullen did not entirely escape negative criticism … and s...
Read more
In the following excerpt. Tuttleton attempts to demonstrate that Cullen's college experience was a source of considerable influence on his poetry
The present work undertakes to describe the und...
Read more
In the following assessment of Color, Locke proclaims Cullen a rare talent whose verse is firmly rooted in poetic tradition and in the African-American experience.
Ladies and gentlemen! A genius! Post...
Read more
In the following review of Color, Dillon notes the tendency of Cullen's verse to become "stilted and prosy" and finds the poet most successful when he is "spare and direct....
Read more
In the following excerpt, Kerlin maintains that Cullen's poems in Color contain particular insights and wisdom that are absent from the works of Caucasian poets.
In 1923 a Negro student in New ...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Gorman states that Cullen's poetry transcends racial boundaries.
Countee Cullen's Copper Sun is his second volume and it is encouraging to observe that it revea...
Read more
In the following review of Copper Sun, Root contends that Cullen's poetry demonstrates a vitality that sets it apart from the predominantly intellectual and lifeless verse of the day.
Modern Am...
Read more
In the following review, the critic states that Copper Sun is of mixes quality yet the best poems of the collection are memorable.
Countee Cullen's second book [Copper Sun] has evidently suffer...
Read more
In the following review, James examines poetic style in The Black Christ, and Other Poems.
[The Black Christ, and Other Poems] proves again that Countee Cullen is an accomplished poet, but it shows al...
Read more
In the following excerpt, Boie offers a generally positive assessment of the verse in The Medea, and Some Poems.
"Some Poems" [in The Medea, and Some Poems] include a number of sonnets w...
Read more
Countee Cullen, an American poet and a leading figure in the Harlem Renaissance was born Countee LeRoy Porter. This 1920s artistic movement produced the first large body of work in the United States ...
Read more