Northern Renaissance And Southern Renaissance Essay

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a time of happiness, music, and migration. Everyone was enjoying this time. This was a time when blacks from the south started migrating north for better opportunities. In the twentieth century, blacks started to move to the North as the train provided easy access to Chicago and other Northern Cities (Wormser). For African Americans in this time period there was not much to do in the south to make a reasonable living without being mistreated by whites and they felt that

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    The Harlem Renaissance The era in American history known as the Harlem Renaissance was a turning point in the lives of blacks in the United States. Harlem, a predominantly black urban community in New York, was the primary destination of the Great Migration. As such, it became the birthplace of a historic cultural movement. The movement of blacks from the southern states to the northern states after the Civil War kick-started the Harlem Renaissance. The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural movement

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    One reason the renaissance began in Europe was the Black Death, this disease eradicated most of the European population. It killed most of the people in Europe, so there were less people to do jobs or make or manage money. So, people took to making leisurely items, like paintings or inventions for money. The Black Death originated in China or Central Asia and was spread to Europe by fleas and rats that resided on ships and along the Silk Road. The Black Death killed millions in China, India, Persia

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    After the Civil War, following the Compromise of 1877 and the end of Reconstruction, the protection for the rights of African American ended if there was any. Southern States had moved to impose a system of segregation on nearly all areas of life. New laws that required segregation that stirred “separate but equal” doctrine that disenfranchise African Americans for almost six decades. It is hard in this days and age to be able to imagine segregation as a law, but the remnants just change form and

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    The Harlem Renaissance The Harlem Renaissance was an important cultural change for America in the early 20th century. This time period lasted from the 1910’s through the mid-1930’s and was considered the golden age for African American culture. Rapid overdevelopment led to many vacant buildings in the northern Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem in the 1880’s. Landlords who were desperate to fill these buildings allowed for African Americans to be the majority in these neighborhoods. These

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    for their own glory. The late Middle Ages saw the emergence of Gothic and Romanesque art in Northern regions of Europe. Sculpture became integral to every style of architecture to represent saints or monarchs in all respectable constructions. Artists began to expose beauty and passion in their work as calm and political stability emerged in the thriving city-states of Italy before the nations of Northern Europe. A new time of peace allowed the Italian city-states to explore the previous glory of

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    The Renaissance spanned centuries, and, if one sifts through the changes of those centuries, he or she would find the reasons that the period is known as “a bridge from the medieval to the modern world.” Niccolò Machiavelli laid the groundwork for the removal of Christian morality, maybe all morality, from politics in his treatise The Prince, though few would admit to agreeing with his ideas for some time (Chabod). Early banks started to develop, notably in Italy and southern Germany. The abuses

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    formal self-portraits painted by female artists. Instead, she sits in a more relaxed and dynamic pose. Compared to the standards of previous Dutch portraits, it’s very casual, which was nearly unheard of during the Renaissance. Leyster was the daughter of a brewer and was the first Renaissance artist to paint scenes of home, family, and domestic scenes. She also was one of the first painters to begin introducing light sourced in her paintings, such as in The Proposition (1631). Judith Leyster’s

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    poems fall within the Fugitive-Agrarianism, now known as the Southern Renaissance, movement that emphasized classicism and traditionalism. The writers that were part of the Southern Renaissance, including Ransom, gathered to write a collection of essays that promoted and revitalized Southern literature in the United States. They were known for “representing the tensions and paradoxes that resulted from the collision of Northern and Southern ideologies” (Holmgren para. 3). Comparably, the Fugitive agrarians

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    so they thought. It directly relates to and shows how blacks were given something or promised a way of life but treated completely different. It also sparked all types of injustices one being segregation and the long standing feud between southern and Northern whites. The

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