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WORKS FROM
THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE
| The period known as the Harlem Renaissance was one of the most
exciting and productive periods in all aspects of Black culture - art,
literature, philosophy, and music. The years between 1920 and 1930, Harlem was
the center of an awakening that left its mark on the creative world for years to
come.
The books listed below are only a small sample of the works created by those young men and women during this fruitful era.
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Langston Hughes's first published poem was the "Weary
Blues" which appeared in the Crisis Magazine in 1926. While he wrote
numerous poems, essays, plays, and short stories, his two
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Zora Neale Hurston, novelist, folklorist, anthropologist. One of her novels, There Eyes Were Watching God, 1937, is a powerful love story of Janie Crawford and her quest for fulfillment. The heroine epitomizes the proud, independent woman who transcends the world in which she lives. Readers who may be put off by the dialect, I promise, if you stick with the story, you won't be sorry. Other books by Hurston include Mules and Men, 1935, Jonah's Gourd Vine, 1934, and Dust Tracks on the Road, 1942.
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| Recently I came across a novel written by Rudolph
Fisher, The Walls of Jericho, first published in 1928. It was
his first novel and it was received with rave reviews. The Walls
of Jericho is a witty, fast-paced novel portraying the lives of Joshua
Jones or Shine, a moving man, Fred Merritt, a successful black lawyer, and
Linda Young, a KM. or kitchen maid, along with an assortment of other
characters. Love, romance, passing, betrayal, revenge,
misunderstanding, all figure in this wonderful novel. Fisher's style
is classic filled with sardonic humor, capturing the flavor of the
day. He even includes an introduction |
to contemporary Harlemese
words such as boogy, ofay, dickty, and Sheba. Dr. Rudolph Fisher, a
physician and writer, was the author of several detective novels and short
stories. His second novel, The Conjure Man Dies,
published in 1932, was hailed as one of the first African American
detective novels. Unlike some of the works written during the Harlem
Renaissance period aimed at uplifting the race and explaining to others,
his novels are just plain good reading about ordinary folk for ordinary
folk.
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