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    Response to Salvation

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    Hour 7 Langston Hughes Response In “Salvation” by Langston Hughes‚ Hughes explains how he as a young boy lost faith in his religion. Hughes writes of being about twelve years old and being brought by his aunt to church to try and find Jesus. Hughes is told that he will see Jesus and “something happened to you inside!” When Hughes went to church he and the other children were put at the front of the church and had all the adults pray around them. Many children got up right away signifying that

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    Langston Hughes Langston Hughes‚ revolutionized poetry and America by writing poems about African Americans because he believed that they were beautiful human beings. Who is Langston Hughes? Langston Hughes is a poet that made poems about the African American literature. He was born on February 1‚ 1902 in Joplin‚ Missouri. For much of Hughes’s childhood‚ he lived with his grandmother in Lawrence‚ Kansas. Hughes relied on his books and grandmother’s stories for entertainment. The many evenings Hughes

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    Ashley Smith 8A 3/4/13 The Harlem Renaissance was a time period in Harlem in 1920. Billie Holiday was born on April 07‚ 1915 and died on July 17. Billie holiday was a great jazz singer. Strange Fruit was a good song. Billie Holiday once said‚ “If you copy it means you’re working without any real feeling” what she is saying that if you copy you have know feelings. Harlem Renaissance was a place to show people talent in the 1920’s. It started in the 1920’ s and ended 1930. It happened in Harlem

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    The era during which a drama is written can altogether change or exemplify certain motives‚ that if written in another time‚ would not only be misread but could also possibly be entirely unrecognized. It is during the era of the Civil Rights Movement in the United States‚ that two prominent dramatists‚ Amiri Baraka and Lorraine Hansberry‚ sought the perfect opportunity to create plays that brought forth‚ with earnestness and directness‚ the great trials faced daily by African-Americans throughout

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    The Harlem Renaissance was a time in which African Americans had an intellectual and inventive movement that thrived with the twentieth century. The Harlem renaissance contribution was based on the influential events of the “New Negro Movement” extended throughout the world. After the Civil War‚ a great number of people migrated to urban areas. Areas like these were such as Chicago or in New York City. This is where a different way of life developed for African Americans. (Fiero‚ pages 100-101).

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    Cruse opens the text with then contemporarily profound ideals concerning the ‘new’ Negro intellectual class that emerged out of the late 1950s and 1960s. In his discussion around the Negro spokesperson‚ I found myself considering the idea of Black representationalism—the avant-garde context of Cruse’s ‘spokesperson.’ His depiction of true America were bone-chilling as he analyzes the country in its totality in efforts to capitalize on the Negro’s function within in. Cruse speaks very highly of Harlem

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    Duke Ellington Influence

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    The Harlem Renaissance(Negro Movement) was during 1919-1929 in Harlem‚ New York. It was a time when African-Americans where able to express themselves through the arts. African-Americans fled from the south to the north because of unfair treatment. This “culture explosion” let African-Americans share their culture through music‚ literature‚ and art. A key figure during this time period is Duke Ellington. Duke Ellington was born April 29‚ 1899‚ in Washington‚ D.C. He was a famous jazz

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    Langston Hughes Langston Hughes was born in Joplin‚ Missouri on February 1‚ 1902 and died in New York City‚ New York on May 22‚ 1967. His father’s name was James Nathaniel and his mother’s name was Carrie Mercer Langston Hughes. His parents separated not to long after he was born. His father later moved to Cuba and later permanently lived in Mexico‚ where he lived the rest of his life working as an attorney and landowner. He eventually traveled to Mexico to visit his father who moved when his parents

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    Harlem nurtured the New Negro during the time that he began his evolution from the Old Negro. It is evident that many of the factors that make up the African American of today are the the result of the many experiences that took place in Harlem. In some cases there are also many interactions that do not happen as frequently as others. For example‚ in the novel Nigger Heaven‚ one of the main characters experiences and discusses one of the major issues that still took place in the 1920’s‚ racism.

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    Biography.com states Ralph Waldo Ellison was born on March 1‚ 1914‚ in Oklahoma City‚ Oklahoma‚ and was named after journalist and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson. His parents‚ Lewis and Ida‚ both loved their children and enjoyed reading literature. As a young child‚ three years of age‚ Ellison’s father passed away in a work related accident‚ in turn‚ leaving Ida to tend and raise Ralph and his younger brother Herbert by herself. As Ellison grew older‚ he realized that his father’s desire was to witness

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