Harlem

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    In Harlem around 1910 and 1930 over a million Black African Americans moved out of all south to northern cities to try to escape racism and discrimination. The movement was called the great migration everybody wanted to live as equal and not to be describe as a “black”. After moving out the south to northern cities, to leave racial pronouns and discrimination behind so blacks got smart suck as poets they created high art and folk art this way to prove to everybody that we were way more than just…

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    Originally called the New Negro Movement, the Harlem Renaissance began in the 1920’s in Harlem, which is a community that resides in Manhattan, New York City (Haskins, 1941). It created a new black cultural identity and it had an effect on African American literature. The Harlem Renaissance had such an effect on African American culture that it changed the way African Americans were perceived; it was said to be the rebirth of the Harlem Renaissance through its’ leading intellectuals and its’…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was an explosion of African American literary, musical, and artistic culture that took place between the 1920s and mid-1930s. It was a time of intellectual and social growth for the black community. During this period, Harlem was a cultural hub attracting black artists, musicians, poets, and writers. Among those artists whose works attained recognition was Langston Hughes. His fierce ethnic pride would influence numerous foreign black writers like Jacques Roumain, Nicolás…

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    Because of this, a time of fun, art, and music was born; we call this era The Harlem Renaissance” (“African Americans in the Harlem Ren” 1). This movement took place during the 1920’s to the mid 30’s. Many black landed in Manhattan, New York around 1918. In the 1920’s, Harlem was ethnically intense with cultural empowerment that promoted artists, musicians, poets, and writers, just to name a few aptitudes. The Harlem Renaissance was…

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    Similar to kings’ beliefs on equality stood Langston Hughes. Langston Hughes was an American poet and social activist whose poetic themes targeted African American Culture, furthermore bringing about his conurbations to the Harlem Renaissance. Two of his poems titled, “Harlem” and “Negro” Hughes uses several elements of poetry to portray the theme, such as similes, diction, imagery and tone. His theme goes to show when you give up on your dream, consequences may arise. Langston wants people to…

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    The Harlem Dancer by Claude McKay was written in 1922. It serves as a historic insight about the realities of African Americans culture that was meant to be used as a means of empowerment serving as entertainment for the white oppressors of the time. In the 1920s the music scene became a huge part of African American culture and a means of self-expression and empowerment for those in the community. With the rise of the Harlem renaissance there grew an appreciation or more so an infatuation with…

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    Women are Powerful The Harlem Renaissance was a ground breaking time period full of artistic development in literature, fine arts, theatre, and music. The African Americans in the United States grew in popularity but still many civil rights problems were still occurring. Many great people from all around gathered and made a difference in the United States and fought for what they believed in. Times started to change and the African American population knew that they had to take a stand. They…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was an African American movement that consisted of inspiring black literature, drama, art, music, and more. Countee Cullen was a motivating author and poet, who helped influence the Harlem Renaissance movement. His works were used during this time to help empower African Americans and to help demand equality. He showed the true cruelty and pain that African Americans suffered, yet he did not speak negatively of the white ethnic group. Cullen embraced not only the African…

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    Annotated Bibliography Anonymous. "Songs of the Soul: The Harlem Renaissance, 1920-1935." Current Events. 8 feb. 2002: SR1 DB - ELibrary. Web. 5 Oct. 2015. The author describes Harlem in the 1920’s as “…a place that vibrated night and day with excitement, promise, glitter, and joy”. Additionally, the article mentions that the significance of the “cultural explosion in Harlem during the 1920’s” justifies the period’s name as “the Harlem Renaissance”. They also provide historical information…

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a very important time period in America. The Harlem Renaissance somehow affected utterly any and every sector of life in America. The Harlem Renaissance was a movement that took place from the early 1920’s until roughly around the mid-1930’s. The Harlem Renaissance was a movement that introduced the America to new African-American cultural expressions that were affected by the African-American Great Migration of America. The Harlem Renaissance was a period of rebirth…

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