Harlem Renaissance: Facts & Related Content
Facts
Date | c. 1918 - 1937 |
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Location | Harlem • New York • New York City • United States |
Did You Know?
- During the Great Migration over 175,000 African-Americans moved to Harlem.
- For a while, Harlem was seen as the center of African-American life in the U.S.
- The end of Prohibition in 1933 meant that white patrons no longer looked for the illegal alcohol and social scene of Harlem clubs, helping to end the Harlem Renaissance.
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Key People

Langston Hughes
American poet

Zora Neale Hurston
American author

Aaron Douglas
American artist

James VanDerZee
American photographer

Dorothy West
American writer

Rudolph Fisher
American writer

Jessie Redmon Fauset
American author

Alain Locke
American writer

Claude McKay
American writer

Countee Cullen
American poet

James Weldon Johnson
American writer

Richard Nugent
American writer, artist and actor

Regina M. Anderson
American librarian and playwright

Wallace Henry Thurman
American writer

Eric Walrond
Caribbean author

Arna Bontemps
American writer

Nella Larsen
American author

May Miller
American playwright and poet

Melvin Tolson
American poet

Carl Van Vechten
American writer and photographer
Causes and Effects
Causes
- Growth in black populations in the North as a result of the early years of the Great Migration
- Popularity of Pan-Africanism among influential African American thinkers such as W.E.B. Du Bois
- Rising rates of literacy, particularly among Northern blacks
- The emergence of national organizations, such as the NAACP, dedicated to African American civil rights
- The vibrancy of black cultural life in Harlem
Effects
- Anticolonial and antiassimilationist movements such as Negritude
- Greater control by black artists over representations of black culture and experience
- Increased presence of black actors in American theatres
- Publication of black authors by major American publishers
- The emergence of African American writers, such as Richard Wright, who called for greater social and political engagement
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