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Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance


In this, the world’s first Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance, readers do something more than witness the triumphs and tragedies of poets such as Langston Hughes and Jean Toomer, novelists like Ralph Ellison and Zora Neale Hurston, musicians like Duke Ellington and Charlie Parker, and performance artists such as Lena Horne and Paul Robeson. Through their challenges and victories, we are encouraged to identify and claim our own challenges and victories.

Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance takes us inside the clubs, theatres, and relationships that made Harlem, New York City, the one-time “Party Capital of the World,” and one of the greatest cultural centers of any era. It also places on bold display the genius that gave the world ragtime, Jazz, the blues, gospel, swing, and all night dancing.

Whereas previously the Harlem Renaissance was considered primarily as the literary achievements of a handful of writers, Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance demonstrates that it was a triumphant exultation of creative genius across the cultural board and one that spread both nationally and internationally. Moreover, through leaders such as James Weldon Johnson, A. Philip Randolph, and W. E. B. Du Bois, it laid the foundation for what would grow into the extraordinary Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 1960s.

Editions (2 of 2)

Harlem Renaissance, Encyclopedia of the
Harlem Renaissance, Encyclopedia of the
Hardcover
9/1/2003
SONLIGHT CHRISTIAN -M
ISBN10 : 0816045399
ISBN13 : 9780816045396
Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File Library of American History)
Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File Library of American History)
Paperback
2003
Checkmark Books
ISBN10 : 0816045402
ISBN13 : 9780816045402

Reader Reviews

Review 09/22/09

Source: Amazon
Date: 27 April, 2007

Can't believe I'm the first to review this...,

By David H. Peterzell "Ph.D., Ph.D." (San Diego, CA United States) - TOP 1000 REVIEWER)

This review is from: Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance (Facts on File Library of American History) (Paperback)

I'm absolutely, positively NOT an expert on this topic. I'm interested in the topic for its own sake, and I'm also interested in cultural and environmental factors that foster creativity. I have kept this book in my car for the last couple weeks, and I find myself reading a passage or two here and there. I've been reading it along with Abdul-Jabbar's recent book. There are quite a few books out there on the Harlem Renaissance, and the last 100 years of African-American history. I'm not familiar with most of them.

Here's why I loved THIS book.

The writing is superb. The passages are about 1-4 pages each, and they confront the reader with the snap, crackle and pop of concise, crisp journalistic prose. The authors have a knack for deepening knowledge while causing the reader to want to know even more about the topic. The portraits tend to be descriptive without being judgmental, which adds credibility to the passages and force to the general topic. At the same time, the authors seem psychologically savvy, providing internally consistent life histories in many instances. There's a phenomenal amount of information here about remarkable people and places. The scholarship appears to be quite good, with helpful references following each passage.


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