Harlem Renaissance Essay

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    the Harlem Renaissance Harlem Renaissance was a social movement after the World War I. It happened when the blacks from various backgrounds—uneducated southerners coming from the Great Migration to the north, the soldiers returning from World War I, and the already educated blacks, all of whom sought their own identity and a place for them in the northern cities. Harlem, a small town in New York, became a cultural center, and a nurturing place for black literature. The Harlem Renaissance…

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    black separatism The Harlem Renaissance flourished in the 1920’s with many black people fleeing the racial oppression of the south and creating a very vibrant culture of poetry, writing, dance, and music in New York and other northern urban areas. “This is a period when the majority of black people in the United States are born as free people- the first generation when they’re not largely born as slaves.” One prominent figure of this time was Marcus Garvey and he chose Harlem as a place to…

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    Veteran’s Day. After the World War I, in the 1920’s, this era was known as the roaring 20’s. The Harlem Renaissance or the Jazz Age came about around 1924. It’s important to note “that cultural developments during this decade was The Lost Generation of writers after the war called the Jazz Age witnessed a flowering of African-American music, as well as art and literature in the Harlem Renaissance. By the end of the decade, the United States was up against troubled times. The stock market crash…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a period in American history that brought forth an “cultural, social, and artistic explosion” (PBS) centered around the African-American neighborhood, and its residence, in New York known as Harlem. Sadly, Harlem currently is becoming more gentrified as the years pass. This is something I noticed on my many visits to New York over the past few years. However, Harlem became famous during this period bringing Iconic establishments still respected today such as the Apollo…

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    returned home, competition for jobs and housing became fierce as the economy took a turn. Discrimination and segregation was still a social priority. Harlem, one a white only city, fell prey to overdevelopment, and many tenement owners had to concede to the many blacks seeking housing, or lose their properties altogether. Because of these factors, Harlem became a primarily black community: a center where many blacks, and intellectuals, writers, artists, musicians, singers and other entertainers…

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    the Harlem Renaissance. The literary movement was poised in promoting African American cultural values that were overlooked and underestimated in America at the time. This essay is not for a mere discovery of facts, but to review the political effects that poets where trying to achieve through their work. The Harlem Renaissance’s purpose was to achieve social justice, have an integrated society and to be able to celebrate their culture through various art forms such as poetry. The renaissance…

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    "The Harlem Renaissance": Influence on The Black community. The 1900s in are seen as one of the most time periods in U.S. History ever, from the Wright brothers constructing the first airplane to the first movie theater. it was especially meaningful for the African American People, numerous events took place during the 1900s that changed black culture, but the most influential of them all was the Harlem Renaissance. The Harlem Renaissance was a culmination of change in attitude and a shift…

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    What was it? The Harlem renaissance was a huge arts movement started by the African-American community of Harlem in the 1920’s. In a time where race riots and lynchings were nothing out of the ordinary, a professional artist of any sort was not considered a legitimate career choice for an African-American person. The Harlem renaissance was a movement that helped to bring forth talented black people and also to create positivity and creativity in a time of great turmoil. Who was it? There…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a time when the African-American culture began to rise in popularity around the 1920s to the mid-1930s. Through artwork, literature, and music the African-American culture was creating a new identity for the African-Americans that were in the movement as well as the some that were not. The Harlem Renaissance was making a name for African-Americans and showed off great raw talent. The Renaissance helped gave the African-Americans a chance to show off their talents to…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural, social, and an artistic explosion that took place in Harlem, New York. During the time of this event, the movement was known as the "New Negro Movement." This event happened between 1917-1935, this was at the time of the end of World War I. During this period in Harlem black writers, artists, musicians, photographers, poets, and scholars were blossoming with creative art. Much of the writings and art was focused on the portrayal of realistic black life.…

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