ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


American Literature Videos 58 videos

American Literature 3: The Poe Must Go On (Part 1)
631 Views

What do you get when the guy who wrote “The Raven” makes a serious effort to write in verse? Poe-try… Now, when you’ve detached your eyes f...

American Literature: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
8968 Views

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, abridged. Ready? Go.

American Literature: Emily Dickinson
4357 Views

Emily Dickinson: Along with Van Gogh, proof that you’re never really famous until you’re dead.

See All

American Literature: Harlem Renaissance 8530 Views


Share It!


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.

Language:
English Language

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

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

Related Videos

Catching Fire (Part 2)
6719 Views

“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
47687 Views

Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.

Edgar Allan Poe: The Twilight Connection
3322 Views

Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?

El Gran Gatsby
866 Views

¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...

Fahrenheit 451
84301 Views

Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...