Emily J. Orlando is a contributing author, “‘Feminine Calibans’ and ‘Dark Madonnas of the Grave’: The Imaging of Black Women in the New Negro Renaissance.” This volume of essays, privileging mostly new scholars in the field of Harlem Renaissance studies, is a representative sampling of the kind of literary scholarship and continuing study needed for this period, also often referred to as the New Negro Renaissance. As a body, the collection recognizes the evolving literary discourse that reflects interdisciplinarity and fluidity among boundaries of race, class, gender, sexuality, and pedagogy. Aimed at scholars, college teachers, upper-level undergraduates, graduate students, and those with special affection and interest in the era, these es...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
The literary movement that so many refer to as the Harlem Renaissance remains contested terrain, and...
The Harlem Renaissance was a collaborative movement, involving writers, performers, and visual artis...
African American women writers published extensively during the Harlem Renaissance and have been ext...
The purpose of this study is to examine the contributions that women writers made to the Harlem Rena...
The period traditionally called the Harlem Renaissance was an era in which African American women ...
The Harlem Renaissance, also known at the Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement, was a revolu...
Dandyism is not only a praxis of representational conflict waged through sartorial aesthetics, fashi...
This dissertation examines the roles of African American educators in efforts to re-make the race be...
Focusing on the period known as the Harlem Renaissance circa 1920-1930, this study explores various ...
Much of the Harlem Renaissance artistic movement was directly intertwined with the New Negro social ...
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 1986.Includes bibliograph...
This dissertation focuses on narratives of Black girlhood in late twentieth-century African American...
The New Negro Renaissance, that period associated with the flowering of the arts in 1920s Harlem, be...
Many of the Harlem Renaissance anthologies and histories of the movement marginalize and omit women ...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
The literary movement that so many refer to as the Harlem Renaissance remains contested terrain, and...
The Harlem Renaissance was a collaborative movement, involving writers, performers, and visual artis...
African American women writers published extensively during the Harlem Renaissance and have been ext...
The purpose of this study is to examine the contributions that women writers made to the Harlem Rena...
The period traditionally called the Harlem Renaissance was an era in which African American women ...
The Harlem Renaissance, also known at the Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement, was a revolu...
Dandyism is not only a praxis of representational conflict waged through sartorial aesthetics, fashi...
This dissertation examines the roles of African American educators in efforts to re-make the race be...
Focusing on the period known as the Harlem Renaissance circa 1920-1930, this study explores various ...
Much of the Harlem Renaissance artistic movement was directly intertwined with the New Negro social ...
Thesis (B.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Humanities, 1986.Includes bibliograph...
This dissertation focuses on narratives of Black girlhood in late twentieth-century African American...
The New Negro Renaissance, that period associated with the flowering of the arts in 1920s Harlem, be...
Many of the Harlem Renaissance anthologies and histories of the movement marginalize and omit women ...
In 1925, book collector and Harlem Renaissance patron Arthur A. Schomburg began the essay The Negro...
The literary movement that so many refer to as the Harlem Renaissance remains contested terrain, and...
The Harlem Renaissance was a collaborative movement, involving writers, performers, and visual artis...