How Did The Civil Rights Movement Impact The Harlem Renaissance

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The Harlem Renaissance was a time period between the end of World War 1 and the 1930s. It was a musical, literary, cultural, and artistic movement in Harlem that greatly impacted the 1920s along with the world today. Many African Americans were able to live normally when they were not ruled by the White people. During the Renaissance, these Africans Americans were able to take pride in their race and show how intellectually capable and talented they were. The movement along with many of the people associated with it broke many Black stereotypes, started integration, and was the early beginning of the Civil Rights Movement. The Great Migration was why and how the Harlem Renaissance began. Because of the World War, labor shortage was present because white men would fight in battle. Also the war decreased the number of European immigration that would work for very cheap. As repeated discrimination, harsh conditions, and the increase of hate groups, such as the KKK, many former slaves found their opportunity to move up north mainly to big cities …show more content…

Harlem, after all, was the capital of jazz music. Jazz music united Blacks and whites because this was a new, fun type of music that they had never seen. Performers like Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington would perform in the Cotton Club. The Cotton Club would only accept whites to go in, even though many of the performers were African American, but they would still perform. Jazz music was so new and unique to the country because it used many new beats, sounds, and rhythms that were unheard of to the whites. Also jazz music included improvisation meaning no two performances were ever the same. Improvisation with the voice, called scatting, was used by singers like Billie Holiday Bessie Smith. What popularized jazz music so much were the radios, just like literature had magazines. This allowed Americans, not just from Harlem, to listen to this new