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         Harlem Renaissance Art:     more books (76)
  1. Selected essays: Art and artists from the Harlem renaissance to the 1980's
  2. Since the Harlem Renaissance: 50 years of Afro-American art
  3. A blossoming of new promises: Art in the spirit of the Harlem Renaissance by Gail Gelburd, 1984
  4. A blossoming of new promises: Art in the spirit of the Harlem Renaissance, February 5-March 18, 1984, Hofstra University, Emily Lowe Gallery, Hempstead, New York by Gail Gelburd, 1984
  5. Rebirth of a People: Harlem Renaissance (American History Through Primary Sources) by Sean Price, 2006-10
  6. Celeste's Harlem Renaissance by Eleanora E. Tate, 2007-04-01
  7. Black Stars of the Harlem Renaissance by Jim Haskins, Eleanora E. Tate, et all 2002-08-30
  8. The Harlem Renaissance: Hub of African-American Culture, 1920-1930 (Circles of the Twentieth Century Series , No 1) by Steven Watson, 1996-08-13
  9. The Harlem Renaissance: An Annotated Reference Guide for Student Research by Marie E. Rodgers, 1998-04-15
  10. Harlem Renaissance by Nathan Irvin Huggins, 2007-05-02
  11. The Power of Pride: Stylemakers and Rulebreakers of the Harlem Renaissance by Diana Edkins, Carole Marks, 1999-10-12
  12. Harlem Stomp! A Cultural History of the Harlem Renaissance by Laban Carrick Hill, 2004-01
  13. Harlem Renaissance Artists (Artists in Profile) by Denise Jordan, 2003-03
  14. Double-Take: A Revisionist Harlem Renaissance Anthology

21. Harlem Renaissance
Detroit Wayne State UP, 1991. harlem renaissance art of Black America. New York Studio Museum in Harlem, 1987. Honey, Maureen.
http://www.georgetown.edu/tamlit/collab_bib/harlem_bib.html
Collaborative Bibliographies:
(return to Collaborative Bibliographies Home Page
Harlem Renaissance (Bibliography)
Original Query
Subject: T/Q: Materials on Harlem Renaissance ***T/Q: TEXT/QUERY*** Here is a short, but ambitious request for materials on the Harlem Renaissance. This is a huge topic, of course. But if people contribute a title or two each, we should be able to put together a nice set of resources for ourselves.
Personally, I would enjoy seeing interesting groupings people have discovered between traditionally literary and nonliterary pieces in the Harlem Renaissance. Any other materialsper the postingon anthologies and A-V materials are most welcome too.
RBass
From: IN%"reuben@koko.csustan.edu"
Subj: Harlem Renaissance Help! Teaching a course on the Harlem Renaissance, Fall 1994. Need info on audio- visual materials, texts, anthologies, literary criticism, etc. related to African-American writers, 1920-40. Thanks.
Bibliography:
  • Adoff, Arnold. I Am the Darker Brother: An Anthology of Modern Poems by Negro Americans . New York: MacMillan, 1968.
  • "Afro-American Writers before the Harlem Renaissance."
  • 22. ARTKids - ARTAges Oriental Art In Summary
    first to Paris in 1926, where he settled, painted, and studied the works of modern European masters. from harlem renaissance art of Black America .
    http://www.artfaces.com/artkids/african.htm
    ART Ages- African Art in Summary "The African continent has produced a great diversity of art from prehistoric times to the present day. In many instances, art production has been related to ritual or tribal ceremonies, as well as serving more secular decorative functions, but it is not always easy to determine the function of a particular work.
    Zaire, Luama River, Zimba, Bango Bango,
    or Hemba people
    Mask
    Late 19th-early 20th century
    Ivory
    8 7/8 x 4 1/8 x 2 7/8 in.
    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas
    It is also problematic to label as 'art' the productions of African craftspeople who frequently considered their work as an essential part of secular or religious life. In many tribes, the artist had a high status, but the artist would not necessarily have been the equivalent of the western fine artist who relied on patronage or the marketplace to regulate his or her production. With these strictures in mind, it is possible to isolate different areas and different practices of African art. From c 7000 BC rock drawings include representations of animals and hunters. From the beginning of tribal differentiation, tribal art has become a way of isolating one tribe from another, and tribal art can take the form of scarification, body painting or sculptural masks used in religious ceremonies.
    FANG
    Mask Gabon Painted wood 18 7/8 in. (48 cm) high

    23. Harlem Renaissance
    Literary Garveyism Garvey, Black Arts, and the Harlem Renaissance. Dover, Massachusetts Majority, 1983. harlem renaissance art of Black Americans.
    http://www.founders.howard.edu/moorland-spingarn/harlem.html
    The Black Renaissance: A Bibliography of Selected Sources at
    Howard University
    Bibliography compiled by Jean Currie Church and Karen L. Jefferson.
    Moorland-Spingarn Research Center
    Howard University, Washington, DC
    SELECTED MATERIALS ON THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE AT HOWARD UNIVERSITY
    The materials in this section are available in the Howard University libraries (DHUUIF/R/L/W/E), in the Channing Pollock Theater Collection (DHUP), in the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (MSRC), and/or in the Afro-American Studies Resource Center at Howard University. Call numbers and location symbols for the materials have been included to facilitate access. Additional materials and more information about the items which follow are available at the individual library locations.
    I Historical Studies and Reference Works
    Historical Studies Anderson, Jervis. This Was Harlem. New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1982. F128.68 H3A65 1982 (DHUP) Aptheker, Herbert. A Documentary History of the Negro People in the United States, 1910-1932. Secaucus, NJ: Citadel, 1973. E185 A58 (DHUU) Bontemps, Arna, ed.

    24. Harlem Renaissance Links - Suite101.com
    harlem renaissance art A look into the creative artists during this time period and providing insight into their exceptional masterpieces.
    http://www.suite101.com/links.cfm/harlem_renaissance
    Topics
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    Search The Web Member Central Join Our Community! Login What's New Become a SuiteU Affiliate ... MemberUpdate Suite University About Suite University Suite University News Visit the University Course Listing ... FREE Demo Course New Topics Parenting Babies and Toddlers Views of a Young Appalachian Woman SpiritWell Travel Book Reviews ... More... Suite Events Teacher Appreciation Event 2004 Family Focus 2004 In Tune With Johann Sebastian Bach More about Suite101 About Suite101.com Advertise With Suite For more information - Select a related topic - 20th Century American Poe A Day in the Life African American Literatu African American Women's American Poetry Baby Boomer Humor Beat Boulevard British and American Lite Children's Literature Christian Humor Classic American Literatu Classic Girls' Series Classic Literature Contemporary Female Humor Crime Stories Crossings and Reflections Entertainment Industry Hu Everyday humor Fantasy Worlds General Book Reviews Harlem Renaissance Humor J.R.R. Tolkien and Middle

    25. Writing Company Harlem Renaissance Items
    A book that covers similar territory, harlem renaissance art of Black America, is a detailed look at how and why, in the 1920s, Harlem s painters and
    http://www.writingco.com/c/@qMrRJ-U_l0hH2/Pages/harlemitems.html
    The Harlem Renaissance
    What Was the Harlem Renaissance?
    In the early years of the 20th century, a great outburst of creativity changed the way African Americans were seen by their fellow Americans, and even changed the way African Americans saw themselves. Writers, musicians, painters, sculptors, dancers, and political activists in urban centers all over the countrybut especially in the Manhattan neighborhood of Harlemwere struggling to gain new political and social freedom, and were expressing themselvestheir rich cultural roots, their poor social conditions, their passion for libertywith a newly won artistic freedom.
    Background and Beginnings
    The roots of the Harlem Renaissance reach back into Reconstruction, when Southern blacks tried, through the Freedman's Bureau and innumerable local efforts, to claim the education, economic opportunity, and political enfranchisement that slavery had so long denied. Their extraordinary initial success, however, called forth harsh reprisals from Southern white reactionaries, who used local and state laws to strip away the rights of their black neighbors, and resorted to violence to squash resistance. The result was a long, slow exodus of many young, creative, ambitious African Americans to the cities of the North. Though scholars disagree about exactly when the Harlem Renaissance began and when it ended, many point to World War One as a starting point. Strict immigration laws were enacted during the war, and many recent European immigrants returned to their home countries to take part in the war. The result was new employment opportunities in the industrial cities of the North. Between 1915 and 1918, so many Southern blacks moved north that the phenomenon has become known as

    26. Art2u Harlem Renaissance Art Posters & Prints
    harlem renaissance art Prints Posters, Home.
    http://www.art2u.com/posterstore/harlem.html
    Home Roxane Gilbert Gallery Print Shop News Online Motion Pictures Buy Posters at AllPosters.com Books Music Animal Art
    Architecture
    Artists: American
    Artists: European
    Art Genre
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    Music:
    Regional Art
    Transportation Art
    updated March 26, 2004 Gallery Posters PrintStudio News Online ... Home

    27. Trackstar: The Harlem Renaissance Art Critic
    The harlem renaissance art Critic Track 211539 Annotations by anthony stenberg View Track •Grade(s) High School (912). •Subjects(s) Arts.
    http://trackstar.hprtec.org/main/display.php3?track_id=211539

    28. Harlem Renaissance Art Photos
    Photos Fine Art Harlem Renaissance. Search. Harlem Renaissance (135 Photos), Pg. 1 of 15, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 . click for more info. SheBa Photo. Art Print.
    http://www.art-photo-photos.com/Harlem-Renaissance-Art-Photos.html
    Add to Favorites
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    logo prints store gallery museum arts slogan design pics images photograph shirt photography drawing photo banner cartoon paint print comics Harlem Renaissance
    (135 Photos) Pg. 1 of 15 She-Ba Photo Art Print 18 x 26 inches Les Bleus de L'Amour Photo Art Print 18 x 24 inches Suzy Solidor Photo Art Print 18 x 24 inches Joan Warner Photo Art Print 18 x 24 inches Amphitryon Photo Art Print 18 x 24 inches Les Fetiches Photo Poster 24 x 36 inches Marionettes Photo Art Print 29 x 23 inches Parade Photo Art Print 29 x 23 inches Poor Man's Cotton Photo Art Print 23 x 29 inches Pg. 1 of 15 About Us I I Help I Join Affiliates Program!
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    29. 88.02.02: The Harlem Renaissance: Black American Traditions
    1. David Driskell, David Levering Lewis and Deborah Willis Ryan, harlem renaissance art of Black America (New York The Studio Museum in Harlem and Harry N.
    http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1988/2/88.02.02.x.html
    Yale-New Haven Teachers Institute Home
    The Harlem Renaissance: Black American Traditions
    by
    Patricia Flynn
    Contents of Curriculum Unit 88.02.02:
    To Guide Entry
    The Harlem Renaissance flourished during the 1920’s in New York City. This period of unprecedented black creative activity followed World War I, and the mass migration of many blacks from the rural South to the urban centers of the North. Issues of cultural identity as well as social and political tension in a segregated culture gave rise to a flowering of the arts in Harlem. Most well-known are the published works of writers, poets, dramatists and musicians; less is known about the painters, and sculptors of the Harlem Renaissance. A visual vocabulary became to be developed for black Americans that celebrated black American’s African heritage, folklore and their daily experiences of life. For the first time black artists had a national audience through exhibitions sponsored by The Harmon Foundation founded by William Elmer Harmon, a wealthy white real estate magnate in 1922. In any discussion of black artistic achievement in the United States, the period known as the Harlem Renaissance (1919 to 1929) inspired a spirit of creative energy and production that provided a forum for black artists. The Harlem Renaissance occurred a little more than halfway between the Emancipation Proclamation of 1862 and the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960’s. The term “Renaissance” might be considered a misnomer for the Harlem Renaissance because it was more of a birth than a rebirth. Its artistic production was based upon a powerful sense of intense race consciousness and pride in black heritage and community.

    30. ArtLex On The Harlem Renaissance
    The harlem renaissance defined with images of example artwrks from this American art movement, and links to other resources. painters, and sculptors of the harlem renaissance celebrated the cultural traditions of African concerned with the harlem renaissance. Also see African art, Afrocentrism, and ethnic
    http://www.artlex.com/ArtLex/h/harlemrenaissance.html
    H arlem Renaissance - A largely literary movement in the uptown Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem in the mid- and late-1920s. The community developed greatly from post-World War I emigration from the South, to become the economic, political, and cultural center of black America. The writers, painters, and sculptors of the Harlem Renaissance celebrated the cultural traditions of African -Americans. Examples of their visual works: Henry Ossawa Tanner (American, 1859-1937), The Banjo Lesson , 1893, 49 x 35 1/2 inches, oil on canvas , Hampton University Museum, Hampton, Virginia. Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller (American, 1877-1968) James Van Der Zee (American, 1886-1983), Future Expectations (Wedding Day) , 1926, printed 1974, gelatin silver print, High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA. See photography Hayden Palmer (American, 1890-1973) Archibald Motley (American, 1891-1980) Augusta Savage (American, 1892-1962) Malvin Gray Johnson (American, 1896-1934) Aaron Douglas (American, 1898-1979). Augusta Savage (American, 1900-1962) Hale Woodruff (American, 1900-1980)

    31. Harlem Renaissance
    A collection of art, poetry, and prose. Includes a link to subscribe to an email discussion list.
    http://www.nku.edu/~diesmanj/harlem.html
    Johnson
    McKay
    Jones
    Hurston Yet do I marvel at this curious thing:
    To make a poet black, and bid him sing!
    - from "Yet Do I Marvel" by Countee Cullen [enter here]

    32. The Harlem Renaissance
    An evergrowing collection of art, poetry, and prose from the harlem renaissance. works of 10 women of the harlem renaissance. The guide's format will be Periods and Movements harlem renaissance. arts art History Periods and Movements harlem renaissance
    http://www.nku.edu/~diesmanj/harlem_intro.html
    Yet do I marvel at this curious thing:
    To make a poet black, and bid him sing!
    - from "Yet Do I Marvel" by Countee Cullen Get a sneek peek of my resource guide , which currently contains primary and secondary works of 10 women of the Harlem Renaissance. The guide's format will be changing this summer and more authors will be included. Beginning May 2000, you will begin to see many changes on this site. Please stop back to see the new design and materials. W hat was the Harlem Renaissance? "From 1920 until about 1930 an unprecedented outburst of creative activity among African-Americans occurred in all fields of art. Beginning as a series of literary discussions in the lower Manhattan (Greenwich Village) and upper Manhattan (Harlem) sections of New York City, this African-American cultural movement became known as "The New Negro Movement" and later as the Harlem Renaissance. More than a literary movement and more than a social revolt against racism, the Harlem Renaissance exalted the unique culture of African-Americans and redefined African-American expression. African-Americans were encouraged to celebrate their heritage and to become "The New Negro," a term coined in 1925 by sociologist and critic Alain LeRoy Locke. One of the factors contributing to the rise of the Harlem Renaissance was the great migration of African-Americans to northern cities (such as New York City, Chicago, and Washington, D.C.) between 1919 and 1926. In his influential book

    33. Painters Of The Harlem Renaissance
    Photo art Resource, NY removed at the order of the National Museam of American art and art Resource, Inc. Find out how to join the harlem renaissance Mailserv
    http://www.nku.edu/~diesmanj/painters.html
    Painters of the Harlem Renaissance
    Note! This page is becoming just a sample page. I now have three galleries featuring the work of William H. Johnson and Palmer Hayden Included here are works by some of the Harlem Renaissance's most talented, progressive artists. Below are thumbnails of the paintings. To see the full picture, click on the picture. The file size is listed below each thumbnail of course the files are large, but they're worth the wait.
    William H. Johnson
    Swing Low Sweet Chariot
    National Museum of American Art
    Photo: Art Resource, NY
    removed at the order of the National Museam of American Art and Art Resource, Inc.
    Les Fetiches, 1938
    National Museum of American Art
    Photo: Art Resource, NY
    removed at the order of the National Museam of American Art and Art Resource, Inc.
    Jardin du Luxembourg, ca. 1948 Gift of Gladys P. Payne in honor of Alice P. Moore Photo: Art Resource, NY removed at the order of the National Museam of American Art and Art Resource, Inc.

    34. The Harlem Renaissance
    The harlem renaissance proclaimed in a collection of prophetic black tracts ideal in assorted post-harlem renaissance cultural forms (literary and art criticism, exhibitions and
    http://www.iniva.org/harlem/hren.html
    "...what is needed is a reformulation of the Harlem Renaissance concept: a reconceptualization that, while retrospective, is also revisionist and resourceful, given the creative, mutable presence of the Harlem Renaissance ideal in assorted post-Harlem Renaissance cultural forms (literary and art criticism, exhibitions and contemporary cinema). For the purposes of this exercise the insertion of a virgule (/) into the word Re/Birth (or Re/Naissance ) underscores this act of reconceptualization. By diacritically separating the prefix Re (which in Latin means 'back', 'again', 'anew' and 'over again') from the suffix Naissance (whose Latin root natus refers to 'birth', 'descent','beginning', 'dawn' and 'rise') we emphasize the concept's original sense of cultural and intellectual renewal and its visual agenda to rediscover and recreate a modern body (in this case a black one)."
    Furthermore, by isolating Naissance and encouraging aspects of the Latin suffix natio to re-emerge (and, consequently, allude to 'tribe', 'race','people' and'class'),we invite interpretations of the Harlem Re/Naissancethat take into consideration the movement's often overlooked objective of establishing a new, spiritual, political, and self-conscious nation.
    "....Harlem Re/Naissance is a provocative response to a new art era: an aesthetic retort that, like Jean Toomer's anthropomorphic, plum bearing perennial, transcends time to celebrate identity, creativity, the past, the present and the body politic. With the visual arts of the 1920s and 1930s anchored by black peoples, we can recollect and reimagine this twentieth century moment when Harlem was not only 'in vogue',or 'on the minds' of a complacent few, but also a geo-political metaphor for modernity and an icon for an increasingly complex black diasporal presence in the world."

    35. Harlem Renaissance Nyc Neighborhood Art Culture Uptown - Renisance
    Like jazz, black art, poetry, literature and entertainment? Here's where you'll find important links about artists and the arts and culture they created during the harlem renaissance, in the 1920s
    http://www.manhattan.about.com/cs/harlemrenaissance
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Manhattan Home Essentials ... New York City Public Beaches zau(256,152,180,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Maps/Transportation Day Trips/Tours Arts/Entertainment Lifestyle/Special Interests ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    Stay Current
    Subscribe to the About Manhattan newsletter. Search Manhattan Harlem Renaissance
    Guide picks Artists and the arts and culture they created in the 1920s and 1930s.
    Circle's Harlem Renaissance Links

    The Circle Association's description of writers of the Harlem Renaissance, and list of links. Encarta Schoolhouse: Harlem Renaissance
    The Encarta Concise Encyclopedia is an excellent resource for brief information on the Harlem Renaissance. A Great Day in Harlem
    A picture is worth a thousand tunes.  Art Kane's famous photograph with close-ups and background information on Harlem's celebrated jazz musicians. Harlem Renaissance
    Jill Diesman's site focuses on the painters and poets of the Harlem Renaissance.  She displays photographs of the artists as well as examples of their work. Harlem Renaissance Video Collection
    View film posters and descriptions from this collection that covers films such as Emperor Jones.

    36. Aaron Douglas Web Art Lesson Home Page
    Offers art lessons for school children, based on the work of AfricanAmerican artist Aaron Douglas, focusing on the harlem renaissance during the 1920's.
    http://www.ops.org/wal/douglasweb/
    Aaron Douglas, Painter Art Lessons on the Web
    For Primary Students [home] [ artwork artist questions activity ... OPS Art Back to the Web Art Lessons Directory Please respect our
    Comments to Webmaster
    URL: http://www.ops.org/wal/douglasweb/home.html
    Last update: May, 1998

    37. African American World . Arts & Culture . Art Focus | PBS
    and Africa to bring ethnic consciousness into art and create a new black identity. The New Negro movement would later be known as the harlem renaissance.
    http://www.pbs.org/wnet/aaworld/arts/artfocus_03.html
    Find out how artists, inspired by their African heritage and African American culture, created art in their own individual styles.
    Aaron Douglas
    Into Bondage
    Related Artists:

    Aaron Douglas

    Palmer Hayden

    Archibald Motley

    Ellis Wilson
    ...
    Augusta Savage

    In his 1925 essay, "The New Negro", Howard University Professor of Philosophy Alain Locke encouraged African American artists to create a school of African American art with an identifiable style and aesthetic, and to look to African culture and African American folk life for subject matter and inspiration. Locke's ideas, coupled with a new ethnic awareness that was occurring in urban areas, inspired up and coming African American artists. These artists rejected landscapes for the figurative, rural scenes for urban and focused on class, culture and Africa to bring ethnic consciousness into art and create a new black identity. The New Negro movement would later be known as the Harlem Renaissance.

    38. Harlem Renaissance Nyc Neighborhood Art Culture Uptown - Renisance
    art Kane s famous photograph with closeups and background information on harlem s celebrated jazz musicians. harlem renaissance Jill Diesman s site focuses on
    http://manhattan.about.com/cs/harlemrenaissance/
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Manhattan Home Essentials ... New York City Public Beaches zau(256,152,180,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Maps/Transportation Day Trips/Tours Arts/Entertainment Lifestyle/Special Interests ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    Stay Current
    Subscribe to the About Manhattan newsletter. Search Manhattan Harlem Renaissance
    Guide picks Artists and the arts and culture they created in the 1920s and 1930s.
    Circle's Harlem Renaissance Links

    The Circle Association's description of writers of the Harlem Renaissance, and list of links. Encarta Schoolhouse: Harlem Renaissance
    The Encarta Concise Encyclopedia is an excellent resource for brief information on the Harlem Renaissance. A Great Day in Harlem
    A picture is worth a thousand tunes.  Art Kane's famous photograph with close-ups and background information on Harlem's celebrated jazz musicians. Harlem Renaissance
    Jill Diesman's site focuses on the painters and poets of the Harlem Renaissance.  She displays photographs of the artists as well as examples of their work. Harlem Renaissance Video Collection
    View film posters and descriptions from this collection that covers films such as Emperor Jones.

    39. African Americans In The Visual Arts: A Historical Perspective
    WC HANDY (music); MALVIN GRAY JOHNSON (art); STERLING A. BROWN (author, poet elected to Phi Beta Kappa, leader among the literate during the harlem renaissance);
    http://www.liu.edu/cwis/cwp/library/aavaahp.htm
    African Americans in the Visual Arts
    A Historical Perspective
    Summary
    Introduction

    Acknowledgements

    African Influences
    ...
    For Further Reading

    S UMMARY This exhibit tells the story of the African-American artists' quest for creative recognition in their chosen art forms. The story follows these artists via their early exposure to European art and genre paintings and respectfully following these rules in their learned crafts. Later, there is a fusion shown, using the European, African, and American cultural context in these artists' works. The exhibit is a visual presentation, along with historical text covering the early and recent achievements of these artists involved in the Visual Arts. Over 60 personalities are on display with biographical facts and information. Many examples of their creations are also represented. Included are: painters, sculptors, muralists, engravers, portraitists, print makers, illustrators, photographers, woodcut printers, lithographers, folk artists, and cartoonists. Books, pictures, photos, magazines, museum catalogs, visual crafts, [etc.] are on display. Library resources and established museums as focal reference art centers are included to enhance the viewers scope in seeking additional information on this subject. A bibliography is available upon request.

    40. Circle's Harlem Renaissance History And Links
    and his new attitude toward life and art, were treated with curiosity if not awe. The lectures attracted stars of the harlem renaissance including writers
    http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/circle/harlem-ren-sites.html
    The Circle Association's Weblinks to The HARLEM RENAISSANCE INTRODUCTION TIMELINE LINKS
    This site was awarded a Times Pick by the Los Angeles Times on 7/28/98 visitors to the Circle's African American Links pages . Last update 9/12/2001. INTRODUCTION Outside of the art world, people rarely think of the renaissance period describing the written word. This habit has extended, as well. to the Harlem Renaissance; however, the written word was a very important part of this period. There had been Negro writers for at least 140 years. Perhaps, the best known were Charles W. Chestnutt and Paul Laurence Dunbar . Chestnutt's novels included The Conjure Woman and The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line , whereas Dunbar, primarily a poet, was best known for his novel The Sport of the Gods . Chestnut's writing, though moving away from the plantation romanticism which had glorified slavery, possessed realistic flavor, and it emphasized relations based on the divisions of the black and white races rather than developing the interior lives of its characters. At the same time, and to some extent today, most African Americans found positive value in the stereotypical puritan compulsions to order, frugality, temperance, decorum, and frigidity which had always served to distinguish the civilized (i.e., whites) from the darker peoples they enslaved or colonized who had to be tutored because they embodied just the opposite of many of these characteristics. With

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