How many poems should an undergrad read? It’s not a riddle or a rhetorical question like licks on a lollipop or the number of years it would take one hundred monkeys to type Shakespeare. It is the dilemma I face again for the 25th or 42nd time devising a reading list for American Literature, 1865 to the Present. I’ve built it, shaped it, tweaked it, trimmed it. I took out Philip Roth and added Toni Cade Bambara. I took out Pound and added Ellison, de- colonizing my syllabus piece by piece, semester by semester. I add up the numbers one more time: white men 13, Black men 11, white women 8, Black women 4. I cling to Frost but release Eliot, trade Fitzgerald for Nella Larsen, and Twain for Chesnutt. I think about the works we’ve read, The voices we’ve heard, the ones we have allowed to shape us, tweak us. How much more we learn about our hidden shames, our hidden selves, from Zora Neale Hurston and James Baldwin than from the retyping of Hamlet or the mimicking of Faulkner. So I pile on Dunbar and Washington and Dubois, Wells and Johnson and McKay, Toomer and Cullen and Wright, I add in Hayden, Brooks, Morrison, Baraka, Lorde, Clifton and Walker, Wilson and Dove and Kincaid. It’s a lot, I know. So I try to ration, pare it down so the students won’t hate me, but how many Langston Hughes’ poems should an undergrad read? All of them. © 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
