The Harlem Renaissance was a literary movement that gave birth to several proficient works of writers who expressed their complete emotions through their works when the Whites in America dominated them. Claude McKay served as a seminal figure in that movement. His poems gave birth to numerous emotions that were hidden inside every Black and which were tormenting them since many years. There are various emotions felt under the umbrella term ‘trauma’. This research article tries to bring out the elements of trauma found in select poems of Claude McKay that the Blacks would have undergone when they were under the Whites
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
This paper discusses Claude McKay’s first novel, Home to Harlem. McKay was born in Jamaica and move...
The New Negro Renaissance and the Negritude Movement comprise two important bodies of literature. Mu...
Black American Literature is a microcosm of the history of the black people’s presence on the Americ...
Claude McKay (1889-1948) is a pioneering-poet of Harlem Renaissance. In the early 20th century, the ...
This paper aims to show and analyze how through “an outstanding poetic creation”, Claude McKay descr...
This article discusses two representative poems by a famous African-American writer, Claude Mckay. I...
Slavery to Social life's Racialism analyzes the disclosure of a black-life tragedy of slavery and ra...
Claude McKay, born in Jamaica in 1890, played a significant role in the development of Black Americ...
Graduation date: 2016This research examines the literary and philosophical dimensions of the African...
The black gatherings particularly in Harlem, constituting a community with its peculiarities, thanks...
Slavery to Social life's Racialism analyzes the disclosure of a black-life tragedy of slavery and ra...
The Negro poet Claude McKay is most widely remembered today for his militant sonnet, "If We Must Die...
Abstract – The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1918 until the...
This study covers the development of American Negro protest poetry, from Paul Laurence Dunbar to the...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
This paper discusses Claude McKay’s first novel, Home to Harlem. McKay was born in Jamaica and move...
The New Negro Renaissance and the Negritude Movement comprise two important bodies of literature. Mu...
Black American Literature is a microcosm of the history of the black people’s presence on the Americ...
Claude McKay (1889-1948) is a pioneering-poet of Harlem Renaissance. In the early 20th century, the ...
This paper aims to show and analyze how through “an outstanding poetic creation”, Claude McKay descr...
This article discusses two representative poems by a famous African-American writer, Claude Mckay. I...
Slavery to Social life's Racialism analyzes the disclosure of a black-life tragedy of slavery and ra...
Claude McKay, born in Jamaica in 1890, played a significant role in the development of Black Americ...
Graduation date: 2016This research examines the literary and philosophical dimensions of the African...
The black gatherings particularly in Harlem, constituting a community with its peculiarities, thanks...
Slavery to Social life's Racialism analyzes the disclosure of a black-life tragedy of slavery and ra...
The Negro poet Claude McKay is most widely remembered today for his militant sonnet, "If We Must Die...
Abstract – The Harlem Renaissance is generally considered to have spanned from about 1918 until the...
This study covers the development of American Negro protest poetry, from Paul Laurence Dunbar to the...
The Negro Renaissance (1920-1930) also known as the Harlem Renaissance was a notable historical phas...
This paper discusses Claude McKay’s first novel, Home to Harlem. McKay was born in Jamaica and move...
The New Negro Renaissance and the Negritude Movement comprise two important bodies of literature. Mu...