Claude Mackay was born in Jamaica, West India on September 15, 1890. He is the youngest child of eleven children. At the age of ten, he wrote a riddle for the celebration of a small school. Then he changed his style and mixed church hymns and West Indian folk songs. At the age of 17, he encountered a gentleman named Walter Jekyll and encouraged him to write his own dialect. Jekyll introduced him the world of new literature. Mackay will soon leave Jamaica and never return to his hometown.
The famous black poet of this era - Claude McKay, Jean Tommer, Karen Karen - Hughes refused to distinguish between his personal experience and the general experience of Black America. He wants to tell the story of his people in a way that reflects their actual culture, including their suffering, love for music, laughter, and the language itself. Langston Hughes died on complications of prostate cancer in New York on May 22, 1967. In his memory, his residence at 20th Avenue in New York City Harlem East was given a groundbreaking position by the New York City Preservation Committee, and East 127th Street was "Ronston Hughes Square" It was renamed.
Among the young African-American writers are names such as County Karen, Zola Neil Hurston, Jessie Facet, Arnabomp, Jean Toumer, Claude McKay and Langston Hughes. Karen graduated from Phi Beta Kappa of New York University. He has a master's degree from Harvard University and a scholarship for Guggenheim. Heston received a scholarship from Barnard University. Fose who graduated from Phil Beta Kappa of Consol University wrote the first novel of the Renaissance and published several novels. Bontemps was awarded the Alexandre Pushkin Prize and eventually was taught at Yale University. McKAY, born in Jamaica, was attracted to the Greenwich Village Community and became a co - editor of Max Eastman 's The Liberator. Hughes graduated from Lincoln University and became one of the most valuable famous poetry and novel writers in America.
Not all artists, intellectuals, reformers of the Harlem Renaissance or the lost generation live in Harlem or the village. Two black writers' novels, Renaissance - Claude Mackay and Jantmer - were launched - "Outsiders in Hallem choose to live elsewhere." Iconoclast HL Mencken is the most living in Baltimore He was in good condition for the Bohemian. Southern white writers including the author of "The Poggi" which was adopted by Gershwin and adapted, satellite members of the black writer and intellectual elite association, and black writer Zora Hurston called Niggerati. Louis's view is that the two Bohemian, Haarlem, and village are also in the heart of this place - a cultural structure meets the restaurant of Algonquin Hotel. . . Left bank of the Seine river