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The Harlem Renaissance By James Weldon Johnson Essay

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Over one hundred and fifty years later, another door was opened that led African-American artists into an era that aided in shaping a new black cultural identity. This new cultural identity was called the Harlem Renaissance. The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural manifestation that lured African-American writers, artists, musicians, photographers, poets, and scholars to Harlem, New York. The Harlem Renaissance shifted the paradigm for cultural and social settings. The blueprints for the Harlem Renaissance began years earlier with African-American genre of literature. James Weldon Johnson was one such writer who sifted through the roughage to promote great writers. Johnson was a reckoning force behind the great push for the Harlem Renaissance. According to The Norton Anthology of American Literature, Johnson favored the memories of his students from the rural South but, he did not condone the use of black dialect. Johnson challenged African-American writers to, “express the racial spirit from within, rather than [through] symbols from without” (Johnson 1009). This is the same argument W. E. B. Du Bois discovered when Booker T. Washington seemingly accepted and settled a lower level of education for African-Americans enrolled at the educational facility founded by Washington. The institution, Tuskegee Institute, was established to train African-Americans in basic agricultural and mechanical skills. DuBois was insulted by the gesture and immediately put together a

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