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Published byCharleen Kennedy Modified over 9 years ago
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The Harlem Renaissance Harlem, NY – 1920’s An upsurge in African American cultural expression
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Renaissance – a rebirth or revival Usually refers to European Renaissance of 1300-1600 An era of curiosity and innovation in science, architecture & fine arts A rebirth of the Golden Age of ancient Greece and Rome
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Harlem Renaissance After WWI – a huge African American migration to the North Harlem (in NYC) welcomed writers, artists, musicians, performers, doctors, students and shopkeepers
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Literature – the “Talented Tenth” Highly educated writers promoted the African American identity in poetry, short stories and drama. Harlem newspapers Crisis and Opportunity published new works.
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Harlem Literary Magazines Writings celebrated rhythms of blues and jazz Captured street-wise wit of “real” African- American people Expressed frustration of a “dream deferred””
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Langston Hughes – one of America’s most celebrated writers of poetry and fiction
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Harlem Renaissance Authors Row 1: (left to right) Countee Cullen and Alice Dunbar-Nelson Row 2: Angelina Weld Grimké and Langston Hughes Row 3: Alain Locke and Claude McKay Row 4: Wallace Thurman and Carl Van Vechten
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Jacob Lawrence – Tombstones and Builders
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Parade – Jacob Lawrence
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Harlem at Night Winold Reiss, 1924
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Blues and Jazz
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The Blues Origin – New Orleans Influences: African American folk music Work songs (shouts and hollers from slave fields) Gospel music
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Jazz - An original American art form Earliest Jazz styles: Ragtime and Dixieland in 1890’sNew Orleans Has roots in: African rhythms European harmonies American Gospel sound Work songs
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After 1917, Jazz spread north and west to New York, Chicago, San Francisco and St. Louis and developed into an improvisational type of music.
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Jazz crossed race and cultural boundaries and became an American music style.
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