Harlem Renaissance Research Paper

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The Harlem Renaissance was an influential time period during the 1920s, it also inspired African Americans (The Golden Age). The Harlem Renaissance was a black cultural Mecca in the early 1900s ,also increased in african american music (“Harlem Renaissance”). The harlem renaissance was a time period when african americans started to embrace literacy musical theatrical and visual arts. The harlem renaissance was centered around Harlem in New York from 1917-1932. This time period was important because it inspired an explosion of cultural pride and new beginnings for African Americans (Alchin). The harlem renaissance all began because of the Great Migration. 30,000 african american people moved from the south to the north and harlem was a popular …show more content…

Zora Hurston was an extraordinary writer, she started to befriend very famous writers such as Langston Hughes. By 1935 she had many of her short stories and articles. She had even had a novel published called Jonah’s Gourd Vine. “Some of her most famous works were The Eyes Were Watching God and Tell my Horse which studied caribbean voodoo. “ She also wrote pieces using prominent dialect to show african american culture. Langston Hughes is one of the most well named writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Mr Hughes wrote for a variety of people from children books to plays but his most famous work are his poems. He moved to Harlem to attend college but he dropped out and began spending all his time in harlem writing and working to support himself. All of his writings reflected the African american culture because he believe it was just as important as the white culture. Some of his most famous pieces of work was “ Let America Be America Again” ,”One Way Ticket” and “Democracy”. Wallace Thurman had many jobs within 10 years of being in Harlem. Mr Thurman had also had a collaboration with Langston Hughes,Zora Neale Hurston and Richard Bruce Nugent called “Fire”. He was also the first to publish an adult-themed stories of Langston