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Claude McKay [1889-1948] JAM/USA
Ranked #107 in the top 380 poets
Votes 79%: 1059 up, 287 down

Claude McKay was born in Jamaica, West Indies. He was educated by his older brother, who possessed a library of English novels, poetry, and scientific texts. At the age of twenty, McKay published a book of verse called Songs of Jamaica, recording his impressions of black life in Jamaica in dialect. In 1912, he travelled to the United States to attend Tuskegee Institute. He remained there only a few months, leaving to study agriculture at Kansas State University. 

He published two sonnets, "The Harlem Dancer" and "Invocation," in 1917, and would later use the same poetic form to record his reactionary views on the injustices of black life in America. In addition to social and political concerns, McKay wrote on a variety of subjects, from his Jamaican homeland to romantic love, with a use of passionate language.

During the twenties, McKay developed an interest in Communism and travelled to Russia and then to France where he met Edna St. Vincent Millay and Sinclair Lewis. 

In 1934, McKay moved back to the United States and lived in Harlem, New York. Losing faith in Communism, he turned his attention to the teachings of various spiritual and political leaders in Harlem, eventually converting to Catholicism. 

McKay`s viewpoints and poetic achievements in the earlier part of the twentieth century set the tone for the Harlem Renaissance and gained the deep respect of younger black poets of the time, including Langston Hughes. He died in 1948.

( Bibliography from Poetry Exhibits )

Harlem Renaissance

YearsCountryPoetInteraction
1902-1967
AFR/USA
Langston Hughes
→ influenced Claude McKay
1894-1967
AFR/USA
Jean Toomer
← praised by Claude McKay


WorkLangRating
If We Must Die
eng
65
The Wild Goat
eng
17
When I Have Passed Away
eng
15
The Harlem Dancer
eng
9
America
eng
8
Flame-Heart
eng
6
The Easter Flower
eng
6
I Know My Soul
eng
3
I Shall Return
eng
3
Song of the Moon
eng
3
The Barrier
eng
3
A Red Flower
eng
2
A Memory of June
eng
1
Romance
eng
1
The City`s Love
eng
1
The Negro`s Friend
eng
1
Winter in the Country
eng
1
A Prayer
eng
0
Absence
eng
0
Adolescence
eng
0
Africa
eng
0
After the Winter
eng
0
Alfonso, Dressing to Wait at Table
eng
0
Baptism
eng
0
Birds of Prey
eng
0
Commemoration
eng
0
Courage
eng
0
Dawn in New York
eng
0
December, 1919
eng
0
Enslaved
eng
0
Exhortation: Summer 1919
eng
0
Flirtation
eng
0
Flower of Love
eng
0
French Leave
eng
0
Futility
eng
0
Harlem Shadows
eng
0
Heritage
eng
0
Home Thoughts
eng
0
Homing Swallows
eng
0
In Bondage
eng
0
Jasmines
eng
0
La Paloma in London
eng
0
Memorial
eng
0
Morning Joy
eng
0
My Mother
eng
0
North and South
eng
0
O Word I Love to Sing
eng
0
On a Primitive Canoe
eng
0
On Broadway
eng
0
On the Road
eng
0
One Year After
eng
0
Outcast
eng
0
Poetry
eng
0
Polarity
eng
0
Rest in Peace
eng
0
Russian Cathedral
eng
0
Spring in New Hampshire
eng
0
Subway Wind
eng
0
Summer Morn in New Hampshire
eng
0
The Castaways
eng
0
The Lynching
eng
0
The Night-Fire
eng
0
The Plateau
eng
0
The Snow Fairy
eng
0
The Spanish Needle
eng
0
The Tired Worker
eng
0
The Tropics in New York
eng
0
The White City
eng
0
Thirst
eng
0
Through Agony
eng
0
To a Poet
eng
0
To O.E.A.
eng
0
To One Coming North
eng
0
To The White Fiends
eng
0
To Winter
eng
0
Tormented
eng
0
Two-An`-Six
eng
0
When Dawn Comes to the City
eng
0
White Houses
eng
0
Wild May
eng
0

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