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HARLEM RENAISSANCE 17 January 2014
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Do Now 17 January 2014 In four sentences, please tell me everything you know about the cultural changes that took place in the United States during the 1920s. Complete this Do Now in your Interactive Notebook or in your Student Folder on Google Drive. Complete this Do Now in your Interactive Notebook or in your Student Folder on Google Drive.
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The Harlem Renaissance Lasted from the 1920s to mid-1930s Was an African-American cultural movement that took the nation by storm Literary, artistic, and intellectual movement "Negro life is seizing its first chances for group expression and self determination.” -- Alain Locke, 1926
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Literary Movement The Harlem Renaissance was primarily a literary movement, but included other art forms as well
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Creating a New Culture African-Americans who participated in the Harlem Renaissance wanted to re-define “The Negro” aside from White stereotypes They also wanted to break free of traditional moral values that brought shame to certain aspects of their lives and might reinforce racist White beliefs
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Great Migration (1916-1970) The Harlem Renaissance got its start from the Great Migration An estimated 6 million African-Americans moved from the rural South to the urban North
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Great Migration, continued African-Americans of many different backgrounds (e.g., African, Caribbean) were crossing paths in major cities like New York and Chicago (as well as abroad, such as in Paris) Such meetings helped encourage activism and cultural change
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Other Influential Factors In addition to the mass migration of many African- Americans, the following factors also helped to foster the Harlem Renaissance movement: Rapidly growing levels of literacy Creation of national civil rights groups Opening of socioeconomic opportunities (jobs), partially due to low immigration rates after WWI Development of a greater level of “race pride”
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Why Harlem? Harlem was a formerly White area that had became predominantly African-American by the 1920s African-American intellectuals from other large cities such as Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles met in Harlem or settled there
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Turnt up! Harlem was the “capital” of the Harlem Renaissance, so it became a popular location of artistic experimentation There was a vibrant nightlife in Harlem during the 1920s-30s
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Some Prominent Harlem Renaissance Artists… Zora Neale Hurston Civil Rights Activist; Author Langston Hughes Playwright; Poet Louis Armstrong First African-American to host a nationally sponsored radio show W.E.B. DuBois Author; Co-founder, NAACP
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It was during this cultural rebirth that Hurston wrote Their Eyes Were Watching God
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