Robert Hayden
- In full:
- Robert Earl Hayden
- Original name:
- Asa Bundy Sheffey
- Born:
- August 4, 1913, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.
- Died:
- February 25, 1980, Ann Arbor, Michigan (aged 66)
- Notable Works:
- “A Ballad of Remembrance”
Robert Hayden (born August 4, 1913, Detroit, Michigan, U.S.—died February 25, 1980, Ann Arbor, Michigan) was an American poet whose subject matter is most often the Black experience. He was the first African American to serve as consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress (a role that later became known as U.S. poet laureate).
Hayden grew up in Detroit and attended Detroit City College (now Wayne State University; B.A., 1936). He joined the Federal Writers’ Project, researching African American folklore and the history of the Underground Railroad in Michigan. His first collection of poems, Heart-Shape in the Dust, was published in 1940. While a graduate student at the University of Michigan (M.A., 1944), he studied poetry with W.H. Auden and served as a teaching fellow, which made him the university’s first Black faculty member.
During much of his career as a Fisk University professor (1946–69) his work was not well known, but he gained a public after his A Ballad of Remembrance (1962) won a grand prize at the First World Festival of Negro Arts in 1966 in Dakar, Senegal. He was appointed consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress in 1976.
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Hayden was influenced by a wide range of 20th-century poets, from William Butler Yeats to Countee Cullen. His best-known poem dealing with Black history is “Middle Passage,” an alternately lyric, narrative, and dramatic view of the transatlantic slave trade. Hayden’s Bahaʾī beliefs were often reflected in his poetry, which confronted the brutality of racism. While teaching at the University of Michigan (1969–80), he published the poetry collections Words in the Mourning Time (1970), including his tribute to Malcolm X; The Night-Blooming Cereus (1972), concerned with the meaning of life; Angle of Ascent: New and Selected Poems (1975); and American Journal (1980). Hayden’s The Collected Prose (1984) and Collected Poems (1985, reprinted, with a new introduction, 1996) were posthumously published.