For quite some time, African Americans have been forced to endure countless hardships - one of which is unfairly a negative disgrace that unduly summarizes their people, culture and way of life. A black stereotype for the entire nationality label, "superstitution, laziness, ignorance, dirty, unreliable, or (criminal)" ("stereotype"). This generalization is a product of public perceptions diluted by persistent history and current prejudice and the spread of media to the harem, a famous African-American cultural center.
In the heyday of the campaign, Harlem is the center of American culture. This community is crowded with publishers, newspapers, music companies, game houses, nightclubs and cabaret shows owned and operated by African Americans. The literature, music, and fashion they produced created a culture and 'coolness' for blacks and whites in America and around the world. Because the 1920s is going to end, the Harlem Renaissance is also so. Due to the stock market crash in 1929 and the accompanying Great Depression, businesses and publications owned by African Americans suffer losses, financial support for the arts provided by customers, foundations, drama organizations decreases The peak period was greatly shortened. It's time.
Laban Carrick Hill, the Harlem Stomp creator of the highest Harlem Renaissance's cultural history ... ... "Through music, through poetry and artwork, the United States realizes that the United States is not African American This is a wonderful phrase I always consider the thought of the Harlem Renaissance Quotable Ralph Ellison's article known as "the United States" will be like a blackless. "In addition to the real Americans, he said that in some way ... it is black."
The Harlem community is a historically and culturally rich community. In the early 1920s, African Americans were an important part of the cultural movement. This African-American cultural movement was called "New Black Movement", later called Harlem Renaissance. Harlem Renaissance is not an organizational movement, it surprised the country. The Harlem Renaissance started around 1918 and continued until 1933, but it temporarily existed, but it changed the face of a black Americans forever. Throughout the development process, everything from poverty to urban development can be seen. Nevertheless, the people of this community combined together to build a strong community and became a model of other black urban areas.
Harlem Renaissance and Black Arts Movement: There are two major black literary movements in American history. First occurred in the 1920s, Harlem Renaissance, most scholars agree that it began with the famous poetry of Claude McKay and "We have to die." McKay wrote this poem In response to the massive mob, Lynch and the murder of the black people in the summer of 1919 at this day and age, our B Dubois and other scholars are the most talented black American I gathered for my efforts to gather artists