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Harlem Renaissance Research Paper

1133 Words5 Pages

You have been migrating for days, for weeks, forever. You finally find yourself among people dancing, singing, painting, talking in the streets. Ladies' skirts flare when they spin, musicians' faces redden when they hit the high note, artists' paint flings across their canvas. You are now migrating through the Harlem Renaissance, a changing point in history. The Harlem Renaissance was a point in history when the world of equality was shaken up and turned inside out. A new angle was taken on the world of art and equality, and politics and ideas emerged from the streets. Black Civil Rights movements were started, a level of equality was reached, and new ideas were bursting out of every wall. The Harlem Renaissance not only shaped equality of …show more content…

According to one study, it says "By 1920, some 300,000 African Americans from the south had moved north, and Harlem was one of the most popular destinations for these families." (History.com, 4). Harlem, as well as other Northern Midwest cities, experienced an overflow of African American population to the growth of their cities. Originally, Harlem was meant as a classy city suburb intended for whites only, but soon turned the opposite. The over development of Harlem, Chicago, and other northern Midwest cities were perfect opportunities for black Americans to find housing, employment, and a place for new opportunities. According to research, the overdevelopment of Harlem's city blocks provided a corner of comfort for the new culture that would spread to the rest of the city and later reintroduce black arts and culture into America. Although by accident, this led to a new cultural and artistic movement that would lay the foundation for the evolvement of new cultures and …show more content…

However, it was still difficult to fit in to a mainly white culture. People were accepting although black music, art, but other groups still wanted a higher level of equality. One study shows that there was a rise in black music sales and signing, however, the groups were not signed as much as groups with mainly white group members. Whites were also mainly dominate in many of these cities, for the exception of a few. With this domination, it was hard for African American people to feel like they really belonged in a world where their own race was the smallest

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