Johnson's literary career began when she became affiliated with the
Saturday Evening Quill Club, where she claimed first prize in a short-story competition sponsored by the
Boston Chronicle. Johnson published several periodicals throughout the 1920s and the early 1930s, when she was 19 years old. During this time, she published more than thirty poems in many different magazines. These magazines typically were African-American known, and included the
NAACP's The Crisis, edited by
W. E. B. Du Bois. She gained most of her notability from her work published in the journal of the
National Urban League,
Opportunity: A Journal of Negro Life, which was a leading platform that showcased the talents of African-American artists. In 1925, Johnson collected multiple honorable mentions in a poetry contest organized by
Opportunity. Johnson received her first poetry award in the National Urban League's Inaugural Contest that same year. In 1926, six of her poems were published by
Opportunity. Her poetry also appears in the first, and only, issue of
Fire!!, a magazine edited by
Wallace Thurman,
Langston Hughes, and
Richard Bruce Nugent. Because of this recognition, many renowned poets of the time began recognizing Johnson's potential and considered her to be outstanding for her age. These awarded poets include
Zora Neale Hurston,
Countee Cullen,
Claude McKay, and others. Johnson, along with
Dorothy West, moved in 1927 to
Harlem, where they began taking classes at
Colombia University to improve their writing. During this time, they befriended fellow writers such as Zora Neale Hurston. She reached the height of her popularity in 1927, when her poem "Bottled" was published in the May issue of
Vanity Fair. The poem was known to illustrate varying aspects of African-American culture. In 1935, Johnson's last published poems appeared in
Challenge: A Literary Quarterly. Though her free verse poems are more often anthologized, her sonnets offer complex and sometimes deliberately ambiguous portrayals of black women's integrity. In particular, in a couple of her sonnets "Missionary Brings a Young Native to America" and "Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem", there was the shared contrast between sonnet and song is illuminated. This is one way that Johnson exploits the subtle differences of the form to simultaneously embody and critique the American sonnet tradition through her writing. Upon her departure from Boston, Johnson resettled in Manhattan in New York City and worked more traditional jobs. With the ending of her formal career as a poet, Johnson began to avoid all media attention entirely. == Works ==