THE Harlem Renaissance Presenters: •Marina Britton •Imani Lewis •Amber Edwards •Jehrade McIntosh OBJECTIVES The aims of this presentation are to: Provide a thorough yet concise explanation of The Harlem Renaissance. List and explain the catalysts of the movement. Examine the movement from literary‚ social and cultural perspectives. Highlight and discuss the key figures and events linked to the renaissance. Discuss the effects as well as failures of the movement. What was The Harlem
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pro-White Anglo-Saxon Protestant (WASP) and anti-everything else. 3. At its peak in the 1920s‚ it claimed 5 million members‚ mostly from the South‚ but it also featured a reign of hooded horror. * The KKK employed the same tactics of fear‚ lynchings‚ and intimidation. * It was stopped not by the exposure of its horrible racism‚ but by its money fraud. III. Stemming the Foreign Flood 1. In 1920-21‚ some 800‚000 European “New Immigrants” (mostly from the southeastern Europe regions)
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There are many different types of music in the world‚ and each one is different because of certain characteristics that help to make that genre stand apart from all the others. One of these genres is Jazz. Jazz is a type of music that was created mainly by black Americans during the early twentieth century‚ and is a combination of American and African tribal music. There are many different characteristics that set Jazz apart from every other kind of music‚ but there are three main distinctions; the
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artistic development‚ racial pride‚ and political organization. The Harlem Renaissance was an era of artistic development where African American literature and music perpetually evolved. African Americans writers such as Langston Hughes and Claude McKay wrote about inequitable discrimination towards blacks that occurred in their society. Additionally‚ artists broke away from the traditional way of art that had been used for hundreds of years and brought their own cultural twist and made their
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THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE The Harlem Renaissance was an early 20th century movement in which writers and artists of colour explored what it means to be an artist‚ what it means to be black‚ and what it means to be an American‚ and also what it means to be all three of those things at the same time. One journalist described the Harlem Renaissance this way: “What a crowd! All classes and colours met face to face‚ ultra aristocrats‚ bourgeois‚ park avenue galore‚ bookers‚ publishers‚ Broadway celebs‚
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Hope Dercks The Capital of Black America Can you ever imagine living in a time when the blacks were completely separated from the whites? Think of all of your close friends and maybe even relatives that are black‚ and seeing them being treated as if they were worthless. All of this changed during the Harlem Renaissance. People such as writers‚ artists‚ and musicians solely believed that Harlem should be a place for Africans to express their culture without being judged by white people. So
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is because everything was through word of mouth. Griots used music and poetry to express their ancestral stories. We have our griots in America such as Langston Hughes‚ Phyllis Wheatley‚ Tupac Shakur‚ Nikki Giovanni‚ Maya Angelou‚ Nina Simone‚ Claude McKay‚ Alice Walker‚ Sam Cooke‚ and many more who was speaking the truth and sharing their ancestral stories to their
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During the early 1930s many black writers begin to produce works that helped to shape and define the Civil Rights movement. Among them was Langston Hughes whose poems and writing contributed directly to the rhetoric of the day and inspired many African-Americans‚ both in and out of the Civil Rights movement. Much of this grew out of what was called the Harlem Renaissance‚ which emerged during turbulent times for the world‚ the United States‚ and black Americans. World War I and the Bolshevik Revolution
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There are so many different issues that African Americans had to overcome in order for our society to be where it is today. Each different movement that our pioneers had to encounter left a major impact for the way things are done in today’s society. Because African Americans did not have their own identity‚ the Harlem Renaissance Movement allowed their creative juices to flow and gave them an out to some the stressors of society during that time. During the Harlem Renaissance‚ African Americans
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literature came from the Harlem era. Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington was a musician who came from the Harlem Renaissance. Blacks and whites would dance the night away together at the speakeasies were he would perform. Writers like Langston Hughes and Claude McKay inspired the African Americans of the time to
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