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American Literature: Harlem Renaissance 8530 Views
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Description:
The Harlem Renaissance: an era when a group of basketball players who could do insane tricks switched gears and started painting oil portraits. Or something.
Transcript
- 00:01
No the harlem renaissance Marie great migration began nineteen sixteen
- 00:13
in there and confirm thanks used began writing about thirteen
- 00:18
zora neale hurston Let's do this jazz is the music
- 00:24
of my soul It speaks through me with whisper of
- 00:28
my ancestors food breaths a harlem new york in the
Full Transcript
- 00:33
nineteen twenties with a fine time and place to be
- 00:36
alive It was a special era for music and literature
- 00:40
unlike any other before or since it was such a
- 00:43
big deal in fact that history books and literary scholars
- 00:46
alike have since dubbed this time as the harlem renaissance
- 00:51
Fancy words for the best party ever throw The harlem
- 00:55
renaissance took place when our whole lot african americans found
- 00:58
new homes in cities like new york and began producing
- 01:01
some seriously incredible music art and literature No longer bound
- 01:05
by the horrendous constructs of slavery and servitude These folks
- 01:09
had newfound freedom and were able to create like they
- 01:11
never could before You can bet some classic work came
- 01:15
out of this time period Think about it until the
- 01:17
eighteen sixties when the thirteenth amendment to the constitution was
- 01:20
ratified and slavery was abolished the on ly life in
- 01:23
america that african americans knew Was that of slavery For
- 01:26
the most part they were completely cut off from western
- 01:29
literacy and art So roughly fifty years after slavery was
- 01:33
abolished african american stormed the city's found inspiration and community
- 01:37
within the place and in each other and went tat
- 01:40
town creating and all the fun began with a little
- 01:43
thing called the great migration the great migration better than
- 01:47
the pretty good migration but not a spiffy as the
- 01:50
totally excellent migration started in the early to mid nineteen
- 01:53
tens in nineteen fourteen a minor footnote in history called
- 01:57
world war one began an american men were leaving their
- 02:00
jobs to go fight over seize this opened up many
- 02:03
positions and factories in the city's southern african americans eager
- 02:07
for a new life and new opportunities rushed to fill
- 02:10
these open positions Hey it appears that war can be
- 02:13
good for something with new jobs came new money and
- 02:15
these migrant workers were able to forge new identities for
- 02:18
themselves as well Part of building identity is in creation
- 02:21
and these folks went all out with their imaginative processes
- 02:25
They've never had the ability to freely create art and
- 02:28
literature that expressed their own Life and struggles and this
- 02:31
was it between the nineteen tens and about nineteen seventy
- 02:34
around six million african american people moved from the south
- 02:38
to the north to start new lives It was pretty
- 02:40
great for everyone I keep going on and on about
- 02:43
how fabulous this time period wass so we need to
- 02:46
check out the actual work of some of its most
- 02:48
noteworthy artists Let's meet langston hughes Little langston was born
- 02:53
in joplin missouri in nineteen o two At the tender
- 02:56
age of thirteen he began writing poetry and had his
- 02:58
first poetry collection the weary blues published when he was
- 03:02
just twenty four by twenty eight he added award winning
- 03:05
novelist to his rapidly expanding literary resume overachieve much langston
- 03:10
sheesh slow your roll it's virtually impossible to talk about
- 03:14
the harlem renaissance without talking about hughes Since he's known
- 03:17
as the driving force of the entire movement his work
- 03:20
was so compelling to a wide audience because he wrote
- 03:23
about the black american experience unapologetically and with no hold
- 03:26
bart hughes understood the importance of capturing and sharing the
- 03:30
rial experience of the people he grew up with and
- 03:33
lived around His work reflects Addiction dialect pain and passions
- 03:37
of african american people in the early nineteen hundreds in
- 03:41
his lifetime hughes wrote and published tons of poems eleven
- 03:44
plays and a grip of books too He died in
- 03:47
nineteen sixty seven due to complications from prostate cancer Hughes
- 03:51
left such a mark in his time at his home
- 03:53
in harlem was decreed a historical landmark and the street
- 03:56
it sits on is now called langston hughes place Yeah
- 03:59
the dude was pretty lovable to say the least Least
- 04:02
I want to see some of hugh's work of course
- 04:04
ugo let's start by reading one of his most famous
- 04:07
pieces harlem dream deferred We'll talk more about its significance
- 04:12
afterward Harlem dream deferred What happens to a dream deferred
- 04:17
Does it dry up like a raisin in the sun
- 04:19
or fester like a sore and then run Does it
- 04:23
stink like rotten meat or crust and sugar over like
- 04:27
a syrupy sweet Maybe it just sags like a heavy
- 04:31
load or does it explode Hoof it's so good to
- 04:34
give me the chills What does the title tell us
- 04:37
about this poem It's a place name title which to
- 04:40
be honest is a fairly ambitious way to kick off
- 04:42
a poem gaming your poem after an entire city assumes
- 04:46
you have some sort of authority to tell the readers
- 04:49
something poignant or meaningful about the place your name in
- 04:52
but we know that langston was more than well equipped
- 04:55
to handle this challenge We also know that even though
- 04:57
he doesn't specifically discuss the business is or the people
- 05:00
in harlem the poem is meant to represent the city
- 05:03
as a whole This poem might well be considered the
- 05:05
anthem for harlem it's so powerful of lasting two diving
- 05:09
deeper let's touch on hues use of imagery imagery those
- 05:13
amazing pictures that spring up in our brains when you're
- 05:15
reading an awesome piece of literature poetry harlem might only
- 05:18
be eleven lines long but it doesn't seem likely that
- 05:21
hughes could have crammed anymore imagery into it After posing
- 05:25
the initial question what happens to a dream deferred He
- 05:28
was immediately smacks the audience with one amazing image after
- 05:31
the next does it dry up like a raisin in
- 05:34
the sun or fester like a sore and then run
- 05:38
Does it stink like rotten meat or crust and sugar
- 05:42
over like a syrupy sweet maybe it just sags like
- 05:46
a heavy load Hughes uses his similes comparisons using the
- 05:50
word like or as in each of these images similes
- 05:53
are direct an effective way to create a madrid poetry
- 05:56
and he was certainly wasn't afraid to use them Each
- 05:58
piece of imagery and harlem stand strong on its own
- 06:01
two feet and causes the reader to envision exactly what
- 06:04
he's saying Remember the question is what happens to a
- 06:07
dream deferred Each subsequent image is a possible answer to
- 06:11
this question That's the good stuff right there Next up
- 06:14
we're going to check out another one of hugh's best
- 06:16
love poems The negro speaks of river's side note it
- 06:20
wasn't considered a kn pc in hughes's day to use
- 06:23
a term like negro We're not just throwing down racist
- 06:26
leg on you Here we go I've known rivers I've
- 06:29
known rivers ancient as the world and older than the
- 06:32
flow of human blood in human veins My soul has
- 06:36
grown deep like the rivers i bathed in the euphrates
- 06:40
When dawns were young i built my hut near the
- 06:44
congo and it lulled made asleep I looked upon the
- 06:47
nile and raised the pyramids Above it i heard the
- 06:51
singing of the mississippi when abe lincoln went down to
- 06:55
new orleans and i've seen it's muddy bosom turn all
- 06:59
gold i've known rivers ancient dusky rivers My soul has
- 07:06
grown deep like the river miami hughes sure knew how
- 07:10
to put words together did need theme is a crucial
- 07:13
element to poetry we haven't yet discussed As you may
- 07:16
recall the theme of a piece is the main idea
- 07:18
to it The theme often focuses on one central subject
- 07:21
So what do you think the theme of the negro
- 07:23
speaks of rivers could be We're dealing with race in
- 07:26
this poem we know as much from the title but
- 07:28
connected to the theme of race is the theme of
- 07:30
identity for instance when he says i looked upon the
- 07:33
nile and raised the pyramids above it he's speaking of
- 07:37
ancient egyptians erecting the pyramids of giza and when he
- 07:40
says i heard the singing of the mississippi when abe
- 07:42
lincoln went down to new orleans he's talking about a
- 07:45
trip the former potus took when he was a teen
- 07:48
lincoln saw the slave market of new orleans and its
- 07:50
horror contributed to his views Of how awful slavery was
- 07:54
and his fight to abolish it fuses referencing specific instances
- 07:58
from history when african people have interacted with rivers or
- 08:01
that a river has played a major role in their
- 08:03
life lives by doing so he's giving the black race
- 08:06
as a whole a sense of belonging he's celebrating their
- 08:09
history as a whole again which connects race and identity
- 08:12
as overarching theme hughes wrote and published a lot of
- 08:15
poem in this lifetime so we don't have time to
- 08:17
read them all today If you're interested Though some of
- 08:20
the other big titles are the weary blues I too
- 08:23
sing america mother to son and theme for english feet
- 08:27
we could hang out and dish about langston hughes all
- 08:30
day long but we've got another remarkable figure from harlem
- 08:33
renaissance to meet so let's hop to it Meet zora
- 08:36
neale hurston the queen of the harlem renaissance party Zorro
- 08:40
was born in alabama in eighteen ninety one but moved
- 08:42
to florida as a toddler This would become the home
- 08:45
she referenced in her own written work Both of her
- 08:47
parents were former slaves which likely shaped her feelings toward
- 08:50
the horrible practice and caused it to become active and
- 08:53
civil rights movements later in life she received an associates
- 08:56
degree from howard university in washington d c for her
- 08:59
writing career began to take form as she wrote and
- 09:01
published pieces in their newspaper Not long after getting her
- 09:04
degree sora took off for the big apple and quickly
- 09:07
became entrenched in the harlem renaissance A likable and friendly
- 09:10
sort zohra made quick friends good all langston hughes was
- 09:13
already an established figure in the movement and was one
- 09:16
of the folks who are on the front Both her
- 09:18
charm and writing skills helped her to create and maintain
- 09:20
a place in the harlem renaissance as the new negro
- 09:24
Until she came along the renaissance had been dominated by
- 09:26
male writers and artists Sora change that by asserting herself
- 09:30
in the scene but unlike use she wasn't trying to
- 09:32
capture the essence of all african american women or men
- 09:35
for that matter she was more concentrated with demonstrating her
- 09:38
talent and power as an individual This was controversial in
- 09:41
a movement that relied on the ideals of unity and
- 09:44
togetherness But zordon back down during her lifetime zohra published
- 09:48
many short stories and a handful of novels including her
- 09:51
memoir her most famous novel their eyes were watching god
- 09:54
wasn't well received by her peers when it was published
- 09:57
in nineteen thirty seven zohra didn't have much commercial success
- 10:00
during her lifetime due to the controversial nature of her
- 10:03
writing and died pennant many years after she died Alice
- 10:07
walker who inspired by nora's work wrote the award winning
- 10:10
novel the color purple wrote an article that sparked renewed
- 10:13
interest in zara's writing once more in this way zohra
- 10:16
became posthumously celebrated and study i know you can't wait
- 10:21
to get your hands on controversial books good thing we're
- 10:24
going to get a closer look next while we don't
- 10:26
have time to hang out and read all of their
- 10:28
eyes were watching god we're going to talk about some
- 10:31
of the novels major themes of the stories big ideas
- 10:34
through imagery the mental pictures hurston creates with words and
- 10:37
read passages that support each one side note We totally
- 10:40
recommend checking out this incredible novel on your own time
- 10:43
ready So the book in a nutshell is about janie
- 10:46
crawford a mixed race woman looking for love her whole
- 10:49
life she marries a man Her grandmother ranges for her
- 10:52
but leaves when has abused turns into threats to kill
- 10:55
her Nice janey then meets and marries the mayor of
- 10:58
eatonville florida Does that name ring a bell but he's
- 11:01
way older than her and eventually dies leaving her a
- 11:04
widow Finally janey meets a wandering dude called tea cake
- 11:07
They goto work in the everglades together but then a
- 11:09
hurricane hits and jamie is attacked by a rabid dog
- 11:12
Cake saves her and contracts rabies when he's bitten by
- 11:14
the dog So much for those heroic efforts tea cakes
- 11:17
rabies cause him to go mad and attacked jane She
- 11:20
shoots him kills him to save herself and is found
- 11:22
not guilty of murder since it was self defense Who
- 11:25
Now that you know that just the plot we can
- 11:27
turn to our themes One of the major themes is
- 11:30
love Janey wants it and searches for it her whole
- 11:32
life This passage comes from early in the book When
- 11:35
janey is a young girl she was stretched on her
- 11:37
back beneath the pear tree and the alto chant of
- 11:40
the visiting bees and son of the pending breathe mobile
- 11:42
And janey felt a pain Remorse Lis suite that left
- 11:45
her limp and later hot diggety This is the pivotal
- 11:48
moment that shapes janey's thoughts about love for the rest
- 11:51
of her life She believes in perfect romance and expects
- 11:54
every future suitor to live up to this ideal Sadly
- 11:58
we already know this doesn't quite happen but it's a
- 12:00
striking image for the steam of love that runs throughout
- 12:03
the entire course of the book Another major theme in
- 12:06
this novel is race and how it affects the characters
- 12:09
Check this out The sun was gone It was the
- 12:11
time to hear things and talk These sitters had been
- 12:14
tongue lis fearless eyeless conveniences all day long Mules and
- 12:18
other brutes had occupied their skins But now the sun
- 12:21
and the osman were gone so the skins felt powerful
- 12:25
Inhuman They became lords of sounds and lesser things They
- 12:28
passed nations through their mouths They sat in judgement This
- 12:32
potent passage shows what the daily life of an african
- 12:35
american looks like while under the white boss man's watchful
- 12:38
eye These people worked hard but in their own time
- 12:41
they can hear things and talk their their own bosses
- 12:44
They can discuss subjects they choose at their own leisure
- 12:47
in this way person gives us a strong sense of
- 12:49
the time place and economic and political climate of her
- 12:52
setting in this novel society and its classes of people
- 12:55
is another prevalent theme and their eyes were watching god
- 12:57
Janey is an enigma The people don't get her because
- 13:00
she doesn't fit in or conform to basic societal norms
- 13:03
Food for thought think this might have been hurston's own
- 13:06
feeling about society right at the beginning of the novel
- 13:09
were given this passage from even ville gossips Was she
- 13:12
doing Come back here and them overalls What a title
- 13:15
for the old man has down back like some younger
- 13:24
for janey she's lost her husband and now all the
- 13:27
neighborhoods busybodies are on her case about what else Her
- 13:31
looks Jamie was likely envied as the mayor's wife Then
- 13:34
she confused everyone when she ran off with tea cake
- 13:37
for the more she's pretty and refined So people feel
- 13:39
threatened by her and turned to criticism instead of getting
- 13:42
to know janey as a person and find out her
- 13:44
real story This passage also touches on the themes of
- 13:48
both jealousy and appearance it's also runs the entire course
- 13:51
of the novel their eyes were watching God also has
- 13:54
themes of memory in the past Freedom and confinement free
- 13:57
well and pride among others as usual There's A lot
- 14:00
more we could say and no more time to say
- 14:03
it do yourself a big favor and pick up their
- 14:05
eyes were watching not to read all the good details
- 14:08
on your own our time's winding down once more friends
- 14:11
as we've seen the harlem renaissance was an important period
- 14:14
in literary history The poetry of langston hughes and zora
- 14:18
neale hurston's phiri Individual ism are some of the most
- 14:20
important takeaways from this period Without these two who knows
- 14:24
what the renaissance would have looked like or if it
- 14:26
even would have happened at all Fortunately this isn't the
- 14:28
case and we've got hughes and hurston's amazing work to
- 14:31
study and discuss It seems like it's time to hit
- 14:34
up some poetry right about now In fact south may
- 14:37
have you heard this one Jazz is the music of
- 14:39
my soul It speaks through me with the whisper of 00:14:42.299 --> [endTime] my ancestors soothing breath
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