HARLEM RENAISSANCE 1916-1929. Great Migration Millions of black farmers and sharecroppers moved to...
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HARLEM RENAISSANCE
1916-1929
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Great Migration• Millions of black farmers and sharecroppers moved to the urban North.• Blacks were searching for opportunity and freedom from oppression and racial hostility.• Thousands settled in Harlem. This became the cultural center of African-American life.
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The Harlem Renaissance
• A flowering of African-American arts
• Expressions of what it meant to be black in a white-dominated world
• Came to an end with the Great Depression
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Authors of the Harlem Renaissance
• Zora Neale Hurston
• Langston Hughes
• Countee Cullen• Represented what came to
be called “the New Negro” - A sophisticated, well-educated African-American with strong racial pride and self-awareness.
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JAZZ – The Sound of the 1920s
• Called the “People’s” music
• Not accepted by the black “cultural elite”
• Created the birth of the “night club”
The Cotton Club was one of the most famous during the Harlem Renaissance
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DUKE ELLINGTON April 29, 1899 - May 24, 1974
• Duke Ellington – Excerpts From Black, Brown And Beige Part 2 - Lighter Attitude – Listening & stats at Last.fm
• An American jazz composer, pianist, and bandleader
• Worked at the Cotton Club during the Harlem Renaissance
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Countee CullenMay 30, 1903 –January 9, 1946
• One of the leading American poets of his time and one of the lights of the Harlem Renaissance.
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Countee Cullen• THE BLACK CHRIST
AND OTHER POEMS (1929) was criticized for the use of Christian religious imagery
• Cullen compared the lynching of a black man to Christ's crucifixion.
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I Have a Rendezvous With Life
I have a rendezvous with Life,In days I hope will come,
Ere youth has sped, and strength of mind,Ere voices sweet grow dumb.
Sure some would cry it's better farTo crown their days with sleep
Than face the road, the wind and rain,To heed the calling deep.
Though wet nor blow nor space I fear,Yet fear I deeply, too,
Lest Death should meet and claim me ereI keep Life's rendezvous.
• Countee Cullen (1903-1946)
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“Hold fast to your dreams, for without them life is a broken
winged bird that
cannot fly.”
Langston HughesFebruary 1, 1902- May 22, 1967
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• shows the life and pride of an African-American during the years of discrimination.
• YouTube - The Negro Speaks of Rivers
“The Negro Speaks of Rivers,” one of Langston Hughes’ first poems.
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Zora Neale Hurston
"I have the nerve to walk my own way, however hard, in my search for
reality, rather than climb upon the rattling wagon
of wishful illusions."
January 7, 1891-
January 28, 1960
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• Grew up in Eatonville, Florida- the nation’s first incorporated black township
• Moved to New York and became famous for her part in the Harlem Renaissance
• Wrote Their Eyes Are Watching God in 1937
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Zora Neale Hurson
• Anthropologist
• Folklorist
• Criticized for her portrayal of blacks as
“common folks working bean fields.”
• Zora Neale Hurston