Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Anxieties of detection and undetection, she concludes, are not mutually exclusive but mutually dependent on each other's construction and formation in American history and culture.
Asian Americans --- African Americans --- Detective and mystery stories, American --- Race awareness --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- Negritude --- Race identity. --- History and criticism. --- Ethnic identity
Choose an application
This compilation of essays takes a closer look at this pivotal point in African American history, as well as its origins, identity, portrayal, of women, and rediscovered authors. This title seeks to offer not only expanded readings of the central themes that have long captivated the attention of scholars across time, but also providing valuable insight into the texts, authors, and critical perspectives too often overlooked.Critical Insights: Harlem Renaissance presents the period of unparallel growth in art and literature from the African American Community, also known as the Harlem Renaissance. With its production of key authors, from Langston Hughes to Claude McKay, among others, the Harlem Renaissance saw the rise in creative endeavors by black artists and writers eager to celebrate the unique characteristics of black life and to challenge the institutionalized racial hierarchy pervasive within twentieth-century American society.These creative thinkers, certainly intellectuals in their own right, used their poetry, short stories, novels, and plays as a vehicle to critique the longstanding issues within society that limited socioeconomic mobility for blacks, while perpetuating startling stereotypes about a community too long oppressed. Because of its undeniable impact in shaping the American cultural imagination regarding blacks and on the larger American literary canon, the Harlem Renaissance has since been heavily studied as the most significant period of artistic as well as cultural development the African American community has ever experienced.
American literature --- African American authors --- Harlem Renaissance --- Intellectual life --- History and criticism --- Harlem (New York, N.Y.) --- Harlem Renaissance. --- Race in literature. --- African American women in literature. --- African Americans in literature. --- Passing (Identity) in literature. --- History and criticism.
Listing 1 - 2 of 2 |
Sort by
|