AFAM 162: African American History: From Emancipation to the Present
Lecture 10 - The New Negroes (continued). The Harlem Renaissance brought together legions of black writers, artists, musicians, and intellectuals who celebrated black culture and romanticized its connections to an African past. In this lecture, Professor Holloway documents some of the expressions of the Harlem Renaissance (also known as the New Negro Renaissance), the political and cultural movement that claimed Harlem as its figurative capital. In fact, thousands of African Americans flocked to Harlem, and it became the center of a rich cultural and political environment - one always fraught with complications, but still understood to represent the best that black America had to offer. As Professor Holloway shows, white enthusiasts of these newly-admired cultural forms visited Harlem to get a taste of black life. Indeed, without the financial support of the white community, whatever cultural efflorescence that did exist in Harlem would have been significantly less grand. Yet the tensions between white patrons and black artists, as well as between black intellectuals and black artists, made the Harlem Renaissance a complex movement. (from oyc.yale.edu)
Lecture 10 - The New Negroes (continued) |
Time | Lecture Chapters |
[00:00:00] | 1. Countee Cullen Poem: "Heritage" |
[00:11:06] | 2. Gwendolyn Bennett Poem: "Heritage" |
[00:13:47] | 3. The New Negro Renaissance |
[00:22:11] | 4. The White Patrons' Fascination with Black Cultural Performance and Ability |
References |
Lecture 10 - The New Negroes (continued) Instructor: Professor Jonathan Holloway. Credit List [PDF]. Transcript [html]. Audio [mp3]. Download Video [mov]. |
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