Most historians believe that the year 1917 was the year that the Harlem Renaissance began. Harlem Renaissance. Today, most historians believe that the year 1917 was the year that the Harlem Renaissance began. Three events led to this. The first is the publication of two verses by Claude McKay. Following this, three times of plays on black lives written by White writer Richie Thomas in the opening ceremony of Broadway followed. These plays are very convincing because they do not contain regular racial stereotypes as well as performances by black artists.
There is no doubt that Harlem is a rapidly growing black big city, what kind of city is it? Haarlem 's historian Gilbert Osovski said, "I believe the deepest change that Harlem experienced in the 1920s was the emergence of a slum street, changing the ideal community into a diverse community of social and economic problems "Slum area" is unfortunately "I can not say" "I can not believe it." 12 Thus, in a community experiencing the typical impact of poverty and discrimination, most harem residents live in poor houses at the edge of poverty or poverty.
Historically, this term has existed in African American discourse since 1895, but it is best recognized as the central term of the Harlem Renaissance (1917-1928). This term has broad relationship with the post-reconstruction era in American history, symbolizing the infamous compromise of 1877. This actually erases the results achieved by African-Americans through amendments to Articles 14 and 15. Henry Lewis Gates (Jr.) handled this evolution comprehensively from 1895 to 1925 in 1988. "Blacks are regaining public voice, sharper than slavery"