The ‘Harlem Renaissance’ is now a dominant term for what is commonly used to describe a cultural movement that emerged between the First and Second World Wars. The term became the hegemonic around the early 1970s, displacing similar, yet distinct, alternatives including the New Negro, the New Negro movement and the Negro/Black Renaissance. This essay traces a genealogy of such terms, metanarratives and historiographical currents. The aim here is to demonstrate how the hegemony of the term Harlem Renaissance is linked to its institutionalization as a subject and the rise of Black studies in the United States. The weighting of Harlem as a geographical reference point both localized and nationalized the subject area which resulted in a ...
The paper envisages and inquires about the significance of black philosophy across the Negritude and...
The 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s were an exciting time for black artists and writers in the United States...
The 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s were an exciting time for black artists and writers in the United States...
The ‘Harlem Renaissance’ is now a dominant term for what is commonly used to describe a cultural mov...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
This paper deals with some of the sociological implications of a major cultural high-water point in ...
American scholarship on the Harlem Renaissance has, until recently, been strongly U.S.-centric, but ...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
AbstractThe historical, social, and economic contexts that led to the birth of the Harlem Renaissanc...
Like other intractable figures of the Harlem Renaissance, the movement’s visual artists sometimes ex...
Like other intractable figures of the Harlem Renaissance, the movement’s visual artists sometimes ex...
Abstract – The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1918 until the...
A paper presented as part of the The Harlem Renaissance after the Transnational Turn panel at the ...
The paper envisages and inquires about the significance of black philosophy across the Negritude and...
The 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s were an exciting time for black artists and writers in the United States...
The 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s were an exciting time for black artists and writers in the United States...
The ‘Harlem Renaissance’ is now a dominant term for what is commonly used to describe a cultural mov...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
This paper deals with some of the sociological implications of a major cultural high-water point in ...
American scholarship on the Harlem Renaissance has, until recently, been strongly U.S.-centric, but ...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
AbstractThe historical, social, and economic contexts that led to the birth of the Harlem Renaissanc...
Like other intractable figures of the Harlem Renaissance, the movement’s visual artists sometimes ex...
Like other intractable figures of the Harlem Renaissance, the movement’s visual artists sometimes ex...
Abstract – The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1918 until the...
A paper presented as part of the The Harlem Renaissance after the Transnational Turn panel at the ...
The paper envisages and inquires about the significance of black philosophy across the Negritude and...
The 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s were an exciting time for black artists and writers in the United States...
The 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s were an exciting time for black artists and writers in the United States...