Back to Results
Cover image of The Harlem Renaissance Revisited
Cover image of The Harlem Renaissance Revisited
Share this Title:

The Harlem Renaissance Revisited

Politics, Arts, and Letters

edited by Jeffrey O. G. Ogbar

Publication Date
Binding Type

This volume provides new historical and literary insights into the Harlem Renaissance, returning attention to it not only as a broad expression of artistic work but also as a movement that found catharsis in art and hope in resistance.

By examining such major figures of the era as Jessie Fauset, Paul Robeson, and Zora Neale Hurston, the contributors reframe our understanding of the interplay of art, politics, culture, and society in 1920s Harlem. The fourteen essays explore the meaning and power of Harlem theater, literature, and art during the period; probe how understanding of racial...

This volume provides new historical and literary insights into the Harlem Renaissance, returning attention to it not only as a broad expression of artistic work but also as a movement that found catharsis in art and hope in resistance.

By examining such major figures of the era as Jessie Fauset, Paul Robeson, and Zora Neale Hurston, the contributors reframe our understanding of the interplay of art, politics, culture, and society in 1920s Harlem. The fourteen essays explore the meaning and power of Harlem theater, literature, and art during the period; probe how understanding of racial, provincial, and gender identities originated and evolved; and reexamine the sociopolitical contexts of this extraordinary black creative class. Delving into these topics anew, The Harlem Renaissance Revisited reconsiders the national and international connections of the movement and how it challenged clichéd interpretations of sexuality, gender, race, and class. The contributors show how those who played an integral role in shattering stereotypes about black creativity pointed the way toward real freedom in the United States, in turn sowing some of the seeds of the Black Power movement.

A fascinating chapter in the history of the African American experience and New York City, the cultural flowering of the Harlem Renaissance reverberates today. This thought-provoking combination of social history and intellectual art criticism opens this powerful moment in history to renewed and dynamic interpretation and sharper discussion.

Reviews

Reviews

An articulate, thoughtful, and far-reaching collection, The Harlem Renaissance Revisited is a superb addition to American History and African-American studies shelves, and deserves the highest recommendation especially for college library collections.

The Harlem Renaissance Revisited offers a rich and various account of how we might go into the future from that partially but unavoidably reimagined past.

Ogbar creates a rich forum that has the potential to inform the future of the field.

The articles suggest rich avenues for further research.

About

Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
272
ISBN
9780801894619
Illustration Description
1 b&w photo
Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I: Aesthetics and the New Negro
Chapter 1. African American Representations on the Stage: Minstrel Performances and Hurston's Dream of a "Real" Negro Theater
Chapter 2. No Negro

Introduction
Part I: Aesthetics and the New Negro
Chapter 1. African American Representations on the Stage: Minstrel Performances and Hurston's Dream of a "Real" Negro Theater
Chapter 2. No Negro Renaissance: Hubert H. Harrison and the Role of the New Negro Literary Critic
Chapter 3. It's All Sacred Music: Duke Ellington, from the Cotton Club to the Cathedral
Part II: Class and Place in Harlem
Chapter 4. "So the Girl Marries": Class, the Black Press, and the Du Bois – Cullen Wedding of 1928
Chapter 5. The Meaning and Significance of Southern Tradition in Rudolph Fisher's Stories
Chapter 6. Back to Harlem: Abstract and Everyday Labor during the Harlem Renaissance
Part III: Literary Icons Reconsidered
Chapter 7. Jessie Redmon Fauset Reconsidered
Chapter 8. Speak It into Existence: James Weldon Johnson's God's Trombones and the Power of Self- Definition in the New Negro Harlem Renaissance
Chapter 9. Border Crossings: The Diasporic Travels of Claude McKay and Zora Neale Hurston
Chapter 10. The Search for Self in Wallace Thurman's The Blacker the Berry: Color, Class, and Community
Part IV: Gender Constructions
Chapter 11. Jack Johnson, Paul Robeson, and the Hypermasculine African American Übermensch
Chapter 12. Between Black Gay Men: Artistic Collaboration and the Harlem Renaissance in Brother to Brother
Part V: Politics and the New Negro
Chapter 13. Perspectives on Interwar Culture: Remapping the New Negro Era
Chapter 14. "Harlem Globe- Trotters": Black Sojourners in Stalin's Soviet Union
Afterword
List of Contributors
Index

Author Bio