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Harlem Renaissance Research Paper

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During the 1920s through mid-1930s, the Harlem Renaissance was a literary, artistic, and intellectual movement that began a new black cultural identity. Harlem, New York, became the center of a spiritual coming of age, which Alain Locke’s explained as the “New Negro Movement”, and transformed social disillusionment to race pride. The Great Migration is a term used for the movement of African Americans in America from the South to the North and Midwest. Between 1910 and 1930, in the first Great Migration, around 1.6 million migrants moved from institutionalized racism in the South to seek a better life in the booming northern economy. Alain Locke was one of the very important leaders of this movement and the Harlem Renaissance. Harlem was a main migration spot for many African Americans, whom embraced their culture and lived within each other. The Renaissance included the visual arts but excluded jazz, despite its parallel emergence as a black art form. Richard …show more content…

Men were to work the hard labor jobs, ones that were to be believed as “too complicated” for women to do. The woman was meant to stay at home- cook, clean, and care for the children. It was very important for a man to have power and fight for what was his own. For men, they feel the dominance over women, and want to be feared by others. In Richard Wright’s, The Man Who Was Almost a Man, it was very important to Dave to get a gun to feel like a man, like the ones around him, as well as protect his family, "But, Ma, we needa gun. Pa ain got no gun. We needa gun in the house. Yuh kin never tell whut might happen" (1939, 1961, page 1064). He was beginning to realize that his elders were continuing to treat him as if he were a child, even though he was almost eighteen. The story was a prime example of a man being confused about his future, and struggling to find his “true

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