This boom was most prominently seen in literature. Most novels published by Black authors in the 1910’s all began drawing on common literary genres and tropes, highlighting British Romanticism, American experimentalism, and Black Folk culture. The literature of this time period also poses great questions on personal identity and the pressures that are brought about through societal issues such as social class, race, and gender. Short stories were also very popular within this time period. Great examples include Fry Street & Environs and The Living Is Easy by Georgia Douglas Johnson and Dorothy West, respectively, provide an insider’s view of color consciousness and diversity and the general experiences of life as an African-American in the Northern United States. Perhaps the most famous art forms of the Harlem Renaissance besides literature is music. Famous musicians like Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong brought about the nationwide popularity of African-American Jazz music, which is widely regarded as the first genre of music that was uniquely American. Jazz music not only made a great impact in the United States, but through World War I, it spread to other countries, such as France, where it became and remains extremely popular today. With this source, I can show and explain the literary and musical feats…