The Harlem Renaissance was the most celebrated African American cultural movement throughout the history of the United States owing to the massive and remarkable literature output by African American artists. Yet, attention to the white participants is limited. One of the most significant white patrons and writers, Carl Van Vechten and his fifth novel Nigger Heaven (1926) have cast noteworthy influences on African Americans, the American society and the Harlem Renaissance. To examine Van Vechten and his most important work and their connection with the Harlem Renaissance in greater details, this thesis focuses heavily on the novel as well as the paper collections of Van Vechten at New York Public Library. Thus, the research method of this t...
...At the age of fifty he abandoned the writing of novels because he felt that he had nothing more o...
232 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.Historical circumstances indi...
The literary movement that so many refer to as the Harlem Renaissance remains contested terrain, and...
Carl Van Vechten became a predominant figure within Harlem Renaissance literary circles because of h...
This study of Carl Van Vechten\u27s controversial novel, Nigger Heaven, creates a transatlantic mode...
Abstract – The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1918 until the...
The lower-class theme that predominates in the Harlem novel stems from the desire of the black novel...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 92-99)Throughout Western culture, notions of racial Othe...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Ar...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
The Harlem Renaissance, also known at the Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement, was a revolu...
Nigger Heaven, by Carl Van Vechten. New York: Alfred A. Kriopf. $2.50. The subject matter of this bo...
The black gatherings particularly in Harlem, constituting a community with its peculiarities, thanks...
The New Negro Renaissance, that period associated with the flowering of the arts in 1920s Harlem, be...
Jean Toomer\u27s Cane is considered one of the literary achievements of the Harlem Renaissance, thou...
...At the age of fifty he abandoned the writing of novels because he felt that he had nothing more o...
232 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.Historical circumstances indi...
The literary movement that so many refer to as the Harlem Renaissance remains contested terrain, and...
Carl Van Vechten became a predominant figure within Harlem Renaissance literary circles because of h...
This study of Carl Van Vechten\u27s controversial novel, Nigger Heaven, creates a transatlantic mode...
Abstract – The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1918 until the...
The lower-class theme that predominates in the Harlem novel stems from the desire of the black novel...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 92-99)Throughout Western culture, notions of racial Othe...
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Ar...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
The Harlem Renaissance, also known at the Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement, was a revolu...
Nigger Heaven, by Carl Van Vechten. New York: Alfred A. Kriopf. $2.50. The subject matter of this bo...
The black gatherings particularly in Harlem, constituting a community with its peculiarities, thanks...
The New Negro Renaissance, that period associated with the flowering of the arts in 1920s Harlem, be...
Jean Toomer\u27s Cane is considered one of the literary achievements of the Harlem Renaissance, thou...
...At the age of fifty he abandoned the writing of novels because he felt that he had nothing more o...
232 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1982.Historical circumstances indi...
The literary movement that so many refer to as the Harlem Renaissance remains contested terrain, and...