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  1. With your hands of greed seeking to touch my throat, I dare you to come one step nearer me: When you can say that. you will be free! Langston Hughes, "You and your whole race" from (New Haven: Beinecke Library, Yale University, ) Source: Poetry (January 2009) This Poem Appears In. Read Issue.

  2. Poem You And Your Whole Race by Langston Hughes : You and your whole race. Look down upon the town in which you live And be ashamed. Look down upon whit.

  3. You and your whole race by Langston Hughes: poem analysis. Home. langston-hughes. Analyses. This is an analysis of the poem You and your whole race that begins with: You and your whole race. Look down upon the town in which you live... Elements of the verse: questions and answers.

  4. 1. You and your whole race. Look down upon the town in which y… And be ashamed. Look down upon white folks And upon yourselves.

  5. You and your whole race. Look down upon the town in which you live And be ashamed. Look down upon white folks And upon yourselves And be ashamed That such supine poverty exists there, That such stupid...

  6. "You and Your Whole Race" is a powerful and confrontational poem that addresses the issue of racial prejudice and discrimination. It challenges the reader to acknowledge the suffering and injustice faced by African Americans and to recognize their own role in addressing these issues.

  7. Langston Hughes. 19021967. Carl Van Vechten, © Van Vechten Trust. Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University. Langston Hughes was a central figure in the Harlem Renaissance, the flowering of black intellectual, literary, and artistic life that took place in the 1920s in a number of American cities, particularly Harlem.