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Analysis: The Harlem Renaissance

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The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural movement that stimulated an explosive wave of literature, visual art, music and intellectualism amongst the Black community in Harlem from the 1920s until the mid-1930s. It was a chapter in a splendid and venerable progression and became a time for cultural celebration and advancement for Black Americans. The roots of the Renaissance can be linked to the Great Migration during WWI (Sayre, 2014), as a result of harsh and relentless racial discrimination and disenfranchisement in the South, relocated millions of Blacks Americans to the North. W.E.B DuBois illustrated the Black American experience during this time in correlation with an ambiguity of an individual whose self-consciousness is split into different …show more content…

(“Langston Hughes Biography”) Hughes’ work encompassed a myriad of poetry, plays, and other literature, including political writings, during the Harlem Renaissance. He became a voice for Black Americans, his work illustrating the everyday lives of the working-class Black American. He highlighted the highs and lows of the Negro in America, shining light on racial stereotypes and prejudicial conditions that permeated the lives of the Black community. In his poem “The Weary Blues”, Hughes refers to the Black pianist on Lenox Avenue repeatedly as a Negro. He is a Negro and a pianist. Hughes also rouses dualism by referring to the pianist’s ebony hands and the piano’s ivory keys. The piece is melancholy in tone and expresses a theme of one’s troubles and worries being calmed or quieted through the power of music. Music, especially Jazz music was a common outlet in everyday life for the Black community in those times. The singer in Hughes’ poem was able to channel the frustrations and pains of life into his music. In the end, the singer stops playing and is able to sleep soundly writing, “The singer stopped playing and went to bed while the Weary Blues echoed through his head. He slept like a rock or a man that’s dead.”

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