Harlem Renaissance

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    the city of Harlem, New York. There might be many things that come to mind when one hears of the city Harlem such as the Renaissance, the ghetto, the hipsters, and even former President of the United States; Bill Clinton. While all of these things do embed the culture of Harlem it has feel from the heights the city once held it fell to the point where it was once even disowned by famous African American poet James Baldwin who was once seen as the city’s golden child. Even though Harlem has been through

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    The Harlem Renaissance writers were able to speak out for African Americans and present to the world their own culture into American life. This movement allowed African Americans to share their talents and abilities with the rest of the society and they did not have to feel the least bit ashamed about it. Through having the chance to share their work, these writers spread across America the ‘new negro’; an individual who has the power to express, share, and present to the world their own uniqueness

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a movement that spanned in the 1920’s to the 1930’s. The name was given to the cultural, social, and artistic explosion that took place in Harlem, New York. The Great Migration of African-American moved from the rural to urban spaces and the South to the North. A poem called, “The Negro Speaks of Rivers,” by Langston Hughes was in 1926. It talks about how Hughes has a passionate care for his race, embracing of heritage, and reclaiming of black origins. “I’ve known rivers:

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    Harlem Renaissance

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    Does High Art of Folk Art Best Express Racial Pride? The Harlem Renaissance was a life changing phenomenon for African Americans. It was an opportunity to escape racial discrimination, and build self-sufficiency. The Harlem Renaissance was also a chance to express themselves through arts. But what art is capable of showing racial pride? I think Folk art is best for representing racial pride because it is the people’s image of what’s happening in their community. Folk

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    Harlem Renaissance

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    Racial Pride? During the Harlem Renaissance many artist, poets, musicians, and dancers express their pride through high art or folk art. They each had their own unique way to show racial pride. Pride on being black became a major theme in essays, art, and poetry of the era. But throughout time, many poets struggled with questions of racial identity to express themselves. Poets debated on the best way to show their pride on being black. The Harlem Renaissance is best known for the rebirth

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    Harlem Renaissance

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    Does High Art or Folk Art Best Express Racial Pride? In Harlem during the 1920s, African-Americans celebrated their culture through art poetry, and music. This was called the “Harlem Renaissance.” Poets during this time argued whether the best way to show pride in being black was through “high art” or “folk art.” Folk art during the Harlem Renaissance best expresses racial pride for three reasons: celebrates black speech, black culture, and the common man. The way some of the African-Americans spoke

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    The Harlem Renaissance is one of the greatest eras for black culture in America, displaying in literature, fine arts and stage performance.  The vital members of the flourishing Renaissance came from South and brought with them the Great Migration.  Hurston utilizes symbolism in the novel The Eyes Were Watching God to emphasize the sense of fulfillment by searching for love and the quest for independence that only few women take. Searching for love, quest for freedom, and the lack of human interaction

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    of the Harlem Renaissance. The Harlem Renaissance was a social, cultural and artistic explosion and movement that kindled a new black cultural identity in Harlem, New York, during the 1920s. In 1926, Alain Locke declared that “Negro life is seizing its first chances for group expression and self-determination.” Harlem became the midpoint of a “spiritual coming of age” in which Lock’s “New Negro” altered social disillusionment to racial pride. According to the Project Muse (2015), The Harlem Renaissance

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    To some extent, the Harlem Renaissance successfully challenged the racist ideals of pre-Depression America. The Harlem Renaissance was a social, political, and cultural movement that gave birth to a generation of African-American artists who strived towards equality through their artworks and activism. The preconceived notions of African-Americans were broken through the art of Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston and other creators of the Renaissance, and the National Association for the Advancement

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    the primary involvement of the African-Americans during the Harlem Renaissance. In light of ownership, the Harlem Renaissance instigated the initiative of the New Negro Movement to define and challenge the stereotypes in the context of the African-Americans. The form of black cultural expressions influenced the idea of ownership during the Harlem Renaissance, expressed in the feelings of African-American struggle. The Harlem Renaissance depended on and appealed to the general consumers of artistic

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