Why Was Zora Important To The Harlem Renaissance

114 Words1 Pages
For a time, the two were close friends and partners. They even tried to develop a play together, called Mule Bone: A Comedy of Negro Life. It didn't work out that well in the end, though. So why was Zora so important to the Harlem Renaissance? Well, her writing provided a desperately needed feminine and feminist voice in a movement that was dominated by men. See Langston and W.E.B. Du Bois may have defined many of the major concepts of the movement, but when they talked about the "New Negro", what they really meant was the New Negro Man. Zora got married to a man named Herbert Sheen in 1927 and divorced in