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NEW NEGRO. The Harlem Renaissance and the Black Cultural Revolution, 1919-1935

Par : David Marcus Wheeler
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8905160165
  • EAN9798905160165
  • Date de parution27/05/2026
  • Protection num.Digital Watermarking
  • Taille164 Ko
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurChiify

Résumé

**In 1920, an entire people stood up and declared: our lives are worth celebrating, our culture has value, we are fully human and capable of anything.** Today that sounds obvious. Back then, it was revolutionary - and it exploded out of a few square miles of upper Manhattan. You've heard of the Harlem Renaissance. Maybe a name or two - Langston Hughes, Duke Ellington. But the textbook shrinks one of the most electrifying cultural explosions in history into a single paragraph, draining out the music, the genius, the politics, and the people who made it happen.
You sense it mattered enormously - to American culture, to Black identity, to the music and literature you love today - but you've never had the full story. Until now. **NEW NEGRO: The Harlem Renaissance and the Black Cultural Revolution, 1919-1935** drops you straight into Harlem at its blazing peak - the rent parties, the jazz clubs, the poetry, and the fierce debates over the future of Black America. **Inside, you will discover:** * **HOW** the Great Migration set the stage for the Harlem Renaissance and a new Black metropolis * **WHO** the giants really were - Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Duke Ellington, Bessie Smith, and more * **WHAT** "the New Negro" meant - and how Alain Locke, Du Bois, and Marcus Garvey fought over it * **HOW** jazz and the blues conquered America from the stages of the Cotton Club * **WHY** the Black cultural revolution still shapes American music, literature, and identity today This isn't a dusty lecture.
It's the Harlem Renaissance brought roaring back to life. The revolution happened here. Step inside. **Scroll up and click "Buy Now" to begin NEW NEGRO today.**