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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    English IV AP 16 November 2015 The Harlem Renaissance The early 1900s was a time marked with tragedy in America. Started and ended with the Great Depression in between, it was not America 's finest moment. Prohibition was in place, the Klu Klux Klan was still marching, and the Lost Generation was leaving for Paris. But despite the troubling times, people still found beauty and meaning in the world around them. They still created art and celebrated life. The Harlem Renaissance was an artistic and literary

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    The Harlem Renaissance

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    the contributions of African Americans to literature during the Harlem Renaissance as a perspective that can be used to understand the critical role African Americans have played in the American criminal justice. The contributions of African Americans to literature during the Harlem Renaissance The Harlem Renaissance was basically a cultural, artistic and social explosion or revolution that took place during the 1920s in the Harlem region of the New York City. At the time, the social-cultural explosion

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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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    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 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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    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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    Harlem Minstrelsy

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    reasons for being to minstrelsy for the Harlem Renaissance, mainly because Isis embodies entertainment and stereotypes. The little girl, Isis, has a personality that hooks readers into the story. Everything about Isis is a way to keep the readers and everyone included in the story captivated. Thus, causing people to believe Isis is simply a puppet being controlled by the need to entertain everyone around her. Zora Neale Hurston takes a different approach to the Harlem Renaissance and focuses her work more

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    Harlem Renaissance

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    Express 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

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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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