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Harlem Renaissance And Racial Violence Peopl Helene Johnson

658 Words3 Pages

The Harlem Renaissance was a time period in which African-American people started taking back their identity. It was a time when Black people started expressing themselves and standing up to all the racism in society. They shared how it affected them, and they started to fight against discrimination. The art and literature of the time period reflect the ideas that were circulating during this time period. For example, the poem A Southern Road by Helene Johnson talks about the lynchings and atrocities that were committed toward African Americans. These powerful messages have influenced artists today, especially artists that aim to bring to light the racially motivated crimes happening around the world. One example of these brave artists is Raye Zaragoza and her song Red which addresses the murder and kidnapping of Indigenous women in America. These two specific pieces hold much of the same meaning, which is to educate people about racial violence …show more content…

She was born in 1906, in Boston, Massachusetts. She published many poems during the 1920’s and 1930’s. She published her poems in small magazines such as the only edition of Fire!!, which was edited by Langston Hughes. She also published in journals such as The Poetry of the Negro, Vanity Fair, and Voices from the Harlem Renaissance. She was married to a man named William Hubbell, and they had a daughter named Abigail. She died in 1995. Raye Zaragoza is a multicultural song writer. She is Indigenous, Mexican, and Japanese. This intersectionality with so many different cultures and ethnicities is something she displays proudly, as she aims to claim her own identity. She currently writes songs for a Netflix series called Spirit Rangers, which is one of the first and only children’s shows that highlight indigenous culture. These two important artists have written about the cruelty that certain ethnicities experience, due to the color of their

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