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These titles are available in the Black Studies Division of the Martin Luther King Memorial Library and each of the branch libraries, community libraries, and the kiosk, through a purchase made possible by a Carnegie Corporation of New York Grant (1999). The exception to this rule is Wintzs seven volumes, Harlem Renaissance, 1920-1940: Interpretation of an African American Literary Movement. This set was purchased for the following branches only: Anacostia, Benning, Georgetown, Petworth, Washington-Highlands, and Watha T. Daniel. Also, ten circulating titles of the following five books have been made available for the Popular Division of the Martin Luther King Memorial Library: There is Confusion, The Conjure Man Dies: A Mystery of Dark Harlem, The City of Refuge: The Collected Stories of Rudolph Fisher, Black No More, and Cane.
Books are in the reference section of the Black Studies Division and each of the branch or community libraries and the kiosk, whereby they are available for your use on demand.
Circulating copies of many of these titles may be available, please contact your local librarian or the subject division in which the title(s) should be located.
Annotations will give you a fairly clear understanding of the content of each book.
Names appearing in the annotations indicate that there are poems, short stories, essays, etc. written by a Washington, DC writer. The numbers in parenthesis refer to the page numbers of works by the Washington artists.
Titles are arranged in alphabetical order by author under the subject division in which they are located at Martin Luther King Memorial Library.
Numbers in bold (810.9 B62662) refer to the call number and indicate where the book is located on the shelf. If you have trouble locating titles, please ask for assistance.
Within the biographies and the timeline on this site, the symbol appears next to titles that are included in this Core Collection (this is not a comprehensive match, but it will provide a start for researchers).
Bloom, Harold (editor). Black American Poets and Dramatists
of the Harlem Renaissance. New York: Chelsea House, 1996. (810.9 B62662)
This volume succeeds in providing a wealth of information on the ten
most significant Black poets and dramatists of the Harlem Renaissance. It includes
a brief biographical sketch, critical extracts, and a bibliography of the works
of each of the ten artists. The following artists are representative of those
included: Sterling A. Brown (16-30), Langston
Hughes (73-94), Georgia Douglas Johnson
(95-109), and Jean Toomer (129-149).
Bloom, Harold. Black American Prose Writers of the Harlem
Renaissance. New York: Chelsea House, 1994. (810.9 B6267)
As stated in the Users Guide to this volume, the contents "provide
biographical, critical, and bibliographical information on the thirteen most
significant black American prose writers of the Harlem Renaissance." For
each of the thirteen selected writers, the section that is devoted to each individual
includes a biographical sketch; a selection of brief critical extracts about
the author; and a bibliography of the authors works.
Included among the thirteen are Sterling A. Brown
(14-24), Jessie Redmon Fauset (36-48), Rudolph Fisher (49-61), Langston
Hughes (62-77), Zora Neale Hurston (78-93),
and Jean Toomer (134-146).
Davis, Arthur Paul. From the Dark Tower: Afro-American
Writers 1900 to 1960. Washington, DC: Howard University Press, 1974.
(810.9896 D291)
This book is divided into two sections. The first is of major importance
because it covers 1900-1940 and focuses on "The New Negro Renaissance."
It is further divided into two parts that concentrate on "The Planters"
and "The First Fruits".
The introductory remarks to "The New Negro Renaissance" present an
insightful discussion of "the social and historical forces that helped
bring the
Renaissance into being; the literary influences at work during
the 1900-1925 period
the social and literary background for the 1925-1940
period
." In addition, there are comments on the minor writers of
the period.
The planters include: Jean Toomer (44-51) and
Alain LeRoy Locke (51-60). The first fruits include
Langston Hughes (61-73), Jessie
Fauset (90-94), Rudolph Fisher (98-103),
Zora Neale Hurston (113-120), and Sterling
A. Brown (125-135).
Gabbin, Joanne V. Sterling A. Brown: Building the Black
Aesthetic Tradition. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1985. (811 B879ZG)
This seminal study of Browns work analyzes
his creative work, literary criticism, as well as provides glimpses into his
life. It elevates and gives due credit to an individual who is internationally
acclaimed as a poet and literary critic of African American and Anglo-American
literature.
Gray, Christine Rauchfuss. Willis Richardson: Forgotten
Pioneer of African-American Drama. Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing
Group, 1999 (812 R526ZG)
This volume clearly demonstrates the role that Richardson played as a
pioneer in the development of African American drama. This is the first full-length
study of Richardsons life and work. Thanks to Gray, there should be an
increased interest in the plays of Willis Richardson.
Harper, Michael S. (editor). The Collected Poems of
Sterling A. Brown. New York: Harper and Row, 1980. (811 B879)
This impressive collection of poems allows the reader an opportunity to review
the large body of Browns poems in a single volume. Sterling
Brown is particularly remembered for his frankness and for the way in which
he so adeptly handled folk material.
Hatch, James Vernon. Lost Plays of the Harlem Renaissance,
1920-1940. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1996. (812.08 L881)
The plays of thirteen playwrights are included in this volume. Two of
the playwrights had a Washington connection: Willis
Richardson ("A Pillar of the Church") and Langston
Hughes ("Scarlet Sister Barry," " The Organizer" and
"The Em-Fuehrer Jones"). The short biographical sketches for Richardson
and Hughes, that precede the plays, provide great insight into their plays and
highlight the significance of those plays as an art form. See the appendix for
a number of documents relevant to the Lost Plays of the Harlem Renaissance.
Consider reading the following selected documents:
1. Jessie Fauset, "The Negro in Art: How
Shall He Be Portrayed?"
5. Langston Hughes, "The Negro Artist and
the Racial Mountain"
9. Angelina W. Grimke, "Rachel
The Play of the Month: The Reason and Synopsis by the Author"
12. Willis Richardson, "The Hope of
a Negro Drama"
13. Alain Locke, "Steps Toward the Negro
Theatre".
Honey, Maureen (editor). Shadowed Dreams: Womens
Poetry of the Harlem Renaissance. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University
Press, 1989. (811.08 S524)
Shadowed Dreams made previously unavailable material accessible
to the general public. The poems are divided into four groups: protest, heritage,
love and passion, and nature. Some of the poets are familiar to those versed
in the Renaissance; however, some are even obscure to the informed. Those poets
with Washington ties are well-represented: Gwendolyn
Bennett (103-108), Clarissa Scott Delany
(142-144), Jessie Fauset (122, 156-158), Angeline
Weld Grimke (73, 123, 145-150, 179-185), Georgia
Douglas Johnson (57-66, 121, 162-164), and Esther Popel (214-216).
Huggins, Nathan Irvin (editor). Voices from the Harlem
Renaissance. Oxford University Press, 1995. (810.8 V8887)
This anthology was compiled with a twofold purpose. First, to show the
context in which the art of the Renaissance occurred; and second, to provide
the reader with examples of the broad range of works that were characteristic
of the period. The author has succeeded in accomplishing his goal by featuring
over 120 selections from the political writings and arts of the period. The
writings of Gwendolyn Bennett, Sterling
Brown, Waring Cuney, Jessie
Redmond Fauset, Rudolph Fisher, Langston
Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Alain
Locke, Richard Bruce [Nugent], and Jean
Toomer are included.
Hutchinson, George. The Harlem Renaissance in Black
and White. Cambridge: The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1995.
(810.9 H976)
This book presents an encyclopedic treatment of the cultural institutions that
contributed to the development of the Harlem Renaissance. Part 1 focuses on
the intellectual climate that helped to foster the Renaissance. Part 2 is a
survey of the literary institutions (The Crisis, Opportunity, The Nation,
The Messenger, The New Republic and a number of book publishers) that
both influenced and were influenced by the Renaissance.
Lewis, David Levering. The Portable Harlem Renaissance
Reader. New York: Viking Press, 1994. (810.8 P8393)
This treasure-trove offers a shining reflection of Black art and culture
during the 1920s and 1930s. It is divided into three sections (essays, poetry,
and fiction) and includes the work of forty-five Renaissance figures. Some of
the artists included are: Gwendolyn Bennett,
Sterling Brown, Waring
Cuney, Jessie Redmon Fauset, Rudolph
Fisher, Angelina Weld Grimke, Langston
Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Georgia
Douglas Johnson, Alain Locke, Richard
Bruce Nugent, and Jean Toomer.
The "Chronology and the Biographical Notes" are well worth exploring
because they both provide a wealth of information for the curious. Lewis features
many important essays and poems that were originally published in The
Crisis and Opportunity magazines. In addition, this is the
first anthology to include Langston Hughes and Zora
Neale Hurstons Mule Bone.
Also see Lewis When Harlem Was in Vogue which is considered
a classic study of the Harlem Renaissance. (700.8996 L673)
Mitchell, Angelyn (editor). Within
the Circle: An Anthology of African American Literary Criticism from the Harlem
Renaissance to the Present. Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1994.
(810.9 W824)
This anthology of African American criticism includes essays that
cover the span of Renaissance writers to the period of 1990. The individuals
that had some affiliation with Washington and the essays that they wrote are
as follows: Alain Lockes "The New
Negro", Jessie Fausets "The
Gift of Laughter", Langston Hughes
"The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain", Sterling
A. Browns "Our Literary Audience", and Zora
Neale Hurstons "Characteristics of Negro Expression.
ODaniel, Therman B. (editor). Jean Toomer: A Critical
Evaluation. Washington, DC: Howard University Press, 1988. (810.81 T672ZO)
This book of critical evaluations includes forty-six essays some of which are
vintage and others of which were prepared especially for this volume. There
is an excellent bibliography of works by and about Toomer
(505-528).
Richardson, Willis (editor),
Plays and Pageants from the Life of the Negro. Jackson, MS: University
Press of Mississippi, 1993. (812.08 R520P)
There is an excellent discussion on pages xxiv xxv that distinguishes
the difference between this collection and Plays of Negro Life
by Alain Locke and T.
Montgomery Gregory. The following playwrights are included: Hilda Wilkinson
Brown, Elmer Simms Campbell, Joseph C. Carpenter, Jr., Thelma
Myrtle Duncan, May Miller, Brenda Ray Moryck, and Willis
Richardson. James Lesesne Wells did the
illustrations.
Rodgers, Marie E. The Harlem Renaissance: An Annotated
Reference Guide for Student Research. Englewood, CO: Libraries Unlimited,
1998. (016.7008 R691)
This Guide will certainly steer the young adult through the maze of information
and resources available on the Renaissance. It is arranged in six (6) parts,
four (4) of which deal with a major area of focus during the Renaissance: Literature,
Visual Arts, Performing Arts, and Sports. Two other areas focus on the historical
overview and cultural /biographical references. This is an excellent starting
point for both adults and students in grades 9 through 12.
Rusch, Frederik L. (editor). Jean Toomer Reader: Selected
Unpublished Writings. New York: Oxford University Press, 1993. (810.81 T672A)
Other than Cane, most of Toomers
contributions to American literature have been almost forgotten. This volume
of previously unpublished writings will restore interest in his works. The writings
(letters, sketches, poems, short stories, etc.) are thematically arranged.
Thurman, Wallace (editor), Fire!! :Devoted to the Younger
Negro Artists. Westport, Conn: Negro Universities Press, 1970. (810.8 F5225)
There was only a single issue of this periodical. It was launched in 1926 with
Wallace Thurman, Langston Hughes and Zora
Neale Hurston as editors. John P. Davis served as its business manager
and
Richard Bruce Nugent was in charge of distribution.
Gwendolyn Bennett and Aaron Douglas were actively
involved with its production. Its purpose was to publicize the younger writers
break with the older literary establishment. In addition to the literary work
of the three editors, Waring Cuney, Lewis
Alexander and Richard
Bruce Nugent were represented in its pages.
Turner, Darwin T. (editor), The Wayward and the Seeking:
A Collection of Writings by Jean Toomer. Washington, DC: Howard University
Press, 1980. (810.81 T672)
In this volume, Turner brings together an impressive collection of Toomers
works. Included in this collection of writings are selections from the autobiographical
material, short stories, poetry, drama, and aphorisms.
Wilson, Sondra Kathryn (editor). The Crisis Reader:
Stories, Poetry, and Essays from the N.A.A.C.P.s Crisis Magazine.
New York: Modern Library, 1999. (810.8 C932)
This Reader contains stories, poetry, and essays that have appeared in
the NAACPs Crisis magazine. The introductory remarks provide
an engaging overview of the NAACP and its official organ, The Crisis.
The Crisis Reader provides a rich selection of writings that were
written during some of the most egregiously racist times in American history
(xxv).
Works of the following artists are represented: Gwendolyn
Bennett, Marita Odette Bonner, Sterling
Brown, Rudolph Fisher, Frank
Horne, Langston Hughes, Georgia
Douglas Johnson, Alain Locke, Willis
Richardson, and Jean Toomer.
The "Biographical Notes of the Contributors" provides some strong
sketches of those whose writings are included in the Reader. These sketches
help the reader to understand the literature from the context of those who wrote
it.
Wilson, Sondra Kathryn (editor). Opportunity Reader:
Selections from the Urban Leagues Opportunity Magazine. New York:
The Modern Library, 1999. (810.8 O62)
This Reader contains selected stories, poetry, plays, reviews and essays
from the Urban Leagues Opportunity Magazine. The artists
represented include the following: Gwendolyn Bennett,
Marita O. Bonner, Sterling
Brown, Rudolph Fisher, Angelina
W. Grimke, Frank Horne, Langston
Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Georgia
Douglas Johnson, Alain Locke, Richard
Bruce Nugent, Willis Richardson, and
Clarissa M. Scott.
The Opportunity along with the NAACPs Crisis
magazine were two effective vehicles that nurtured and promoted the art and
literature of the Renaissance.
Wintz, Cary D. (editor). Harlem Renaissance, 1920-1940:
Interpretation of An African American Literary Movement. New York: Garland
Press, 1996. (7 volumes)
This seven volume set is a comprehensive study of the Harlem Renaissance, and
the title of each volume gives a clear indication of the material included.
In the editors overview of the series, he states "The Harlem Renaissance
was the most significant event in African American literature and culture in
the twentieth century. While its most obvious manifestations was as a self-conscious
literary movement, it touched almost every aspect of African American culture
and intellectual life in the period from World War I to the Great Depression.
Its impact redefined black music, theater, and the visual arts; it reflected
a new militant political/racial consciousness and racial pride that was associated
with the term New Negro
." (Wintz, ix)
The Emergence of the Harlem Renaissance, vol.1 (810.9 H285E)
The Politics and Aesthetics of "New Negro" Literature, vol.
2 (810.9 H285P)
Black Writers Interpret the Harlem Renaissance, vol. 3 (810.9 H285B)
The Critics and the Harlem Renaissance, vol. 4 (810.9 H285C)
Remembering the Harlem Renaissance, vol. 5 (810.9 H285R)
Analysis and Assessment, 1940-1979, vol. 6 (810.9 H285AN)
Analysis and Assessment, 1980-1994, vol. 7 (810.9 H285ANA)
Woodson, Jon. To Make a New Race: Toomer, Gurdjieff,
and the Harlem Renaissance. Jackson, MS: University of Mississippi Press,
1999. (813 T6722W)
It has been widely accepted that Toomer brought
the Gurdjieff system of self-development to Harlem. He received his training
from Gurdjieff. For the first time, there is a study that deciphers the works
of Toomer, Wallace Thurman, Rudolph Fisher,
Zora Neale Hurston, Nella Larsen, and George
Schuyler. As stated in the Preface, "behind all of their writings stands,
George Ivanovich Gurdjieff (1866-1949), one of the most original, inspiring,
and mysterious spiritual teachers of the modern period
." (Woodson,
x)
Bearden, Romare and Harry Henderson. A History of African-American
Art: From 1792 to the Present. New York: Pantheon Books, 1993. (704.0396 B368)
Bearden and Henderson provide an excellent survey of African American art beginning
in the 18th Century and culminating with art and artists of the 1980s. There
are two sections that are of particular importance to the scope of this Resource
Guide: "The Twenties and the Black Renaissance," (115-225), and "Emergence
of African-American Artists During the Depression," (227-271, 280-292).
Campbell, Mary Schmidt. Harlem Renaissance: Art of Black America. New York: Abrams, Inc., 1994. (704.0396 H284)
Cassidy, Donna M. Painting the Musical City: Jazz and
Cultural Identity in American Art, 1910-1940. Washington, DC: Smithsonian
Institution Press, 1997. (704.9497 C345)
Chapter four, "Jazz and African American Identity," is a must
read for those interested in the Renaissance. For African American artists of
the period, as well as others, the musicians of jazz played a major role in
thematic subject matter. According to Cassidy, "[Aaron] Douglas saw the
equivalents of his art and those of music; he wrote about his distinctive decorative
style as a visualization of African American music. Jazz iconography also functioned
as part of Douglass representation of the contemporary African American
scene and of Harlem as the modern black city. Through images drawn from jazz
Douglas constructed a racial identity." (Cassidy, 4)
Chambers, Veronica. Harlem Renaissance. Broomall,
PA: Chelsea House, 1997. (700.8996 C445)
This volume provides an overview for the younger reader. The reader is introduced
to key individuals in literature, music, dance, and the visual arts, as well
as the intellectuals and social reformers of the period. The illustrations add
powerful visual support to the text.
Davis, Keith F., The Passionate Observer: Photographs
by Carl Van Vechten. Kansas City, MO: Hallmark Card, Inc., 1993. (779.2092 V284ZD)
This volume is the eighth publication in a series from the photographs
in the Hallmark Photographic Collection. The book provides an overview of the
body of work that was done in portraiture, "the most important aspect of
Van Vechtens photographic work and the breadth of its thirty-year
chronological span." This selection provides evidence of the significance
of Carl Van Vechtens photographic career. (Davis, 8)
Huggins, Nathan Irvin. Harlem Renaissance. New
York: Oxford University Press, 1971. (700.9747 H891)
Huggins book was the first full-scale treatment of the period referred
to as the Harlem Renaissance. As a cultural historian his major contribution
has been to analysis the Harlem Renaissance within the context of this countrys
overall cultural history.
In its totality, Huggins views the Renaissance as a failure. With the exception
of jazz, which had its roots in the black experience, other artistic creations
were enslaved to white forms and values. He states that " The black intellectuals
were searching for their own identity, but they were bound up in a more general
American experience
. For black and white Americans have been so long and
so intimately a part of one anothers experience that
they cannot
be understood independently." (Huggins, 11)
Kellner, Bruce. Harlem Renaissance: A Historical Dictionary
for the Era. New York: Methuen, Inc., 1987. (700.8996 H284)
Kellners Introduction provides a vivid overview of the period and
offers glimpses at its key players. This comprehensive source provides a wealth
of information that is useful and engaging if read on its own or used to provide
supporting information when reading other books. The volume includes names,
places, incidents, and publications.
The Appendices are rich: " A Chronology of Significant Events, 1917-1935;"
"A Harlem Renaissance Library" which includes a chronology of books
printed between 1917-1935; "Plays by, about, or Featuring Afro-Americans,
1917-1935;" "Serial Publications from the Harlem Renaissance;"
and "A Glossary of Harlem Slang."
Lewis, David Levering. When Harlem Was in Vogue.
New York: Alfred Knopf, 1981. (700.8996 L973)
This clearly written intellectual and social history covers all aspects
of the Harlem Renaissance and gives the reader an assessment of its achievements.
Lewis vividly illustrates why the Renaissance was a time of rich black literary
and artistic accomplishments.
Lewis, Samella. African American Art and Artists.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990. (704.0396 L676AF)
The third section, "New Americanism and Ethnic Identity," of
this volume (59-105) deals with visual arts between 1920-1940. Some of the artists
represented include: Lois Jones, James Porter,
Alma Thomas, and James Lesesne Wells.
Patton, Sharon F. African-American Art. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1998. (704.0396 P322)
Section 3, "Twentieth-Century America and Modern Art, 1900-1960,"
is particularly important for purposes of this Guide. Beginning on page 109,
the reader is presented with highlights of the "New Negro Ideas."
Patton provides in-depth information on art movements and individual artists
and their works.
Porter, James A. Modern
Negro Art. Washington, DC: Howard University Press, 1992. (709.73 P946A2)
This volume is considered a classic work on African American art. The
bibliographic material is still essential in providing early source material.
The following chapters are crucial for the coverage of this Resource Guide:
"The New Negro Movement," Chapter VI, (86-101); "The New Horizons
of Painting," Chapter VII, (102-123); and "The New Sculpture,"
Chapter VIII, (124-134).
Reynolds, Gary A. and Beryl J. Wright. Against the Odds:
African-American Artists and the Harmon Foundation. Newark, New Jersey:
The Newark Museum, 1989. (704.0396 R463)
This exhibition catalogue provides insight into the Harmon Foundations
annual juried art exhibitions between 1928-1933. It includes works by those
artists who participated in the exhibitions and programs. The text is balanced
providing information that highlighted the good that was done by the foundation
as well as the art critics remarks of the Foundations exhibitions.
The text provides historical background as to the role that various groups,
individuals, and organizations made in promoting the artistic (visual and literary)
endeavors of Blacks during the 1920s and 1930s. The artwork presented in this
catalogue is a testament to the quality of work produced during this time period.
Rhapsodies in Black: Art of the Harlem Renaissance.
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997. (704.0396 R468)
This volume is the catalogue for an exhibition that commenced at the
Hayward Gallery, London and culminated at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington,
DC. As stated in the Foreword, Rhapsodies in Black focuses on a subject that
has been explored in exhibitions in the United States, but never in Britain,
or indeed anywhere in Europe." The exhibition sought to put the work of
those artists from the New Negro arts movement within a contextual reference
that demonstrated the interaction that occurred across racial and ethical bounds.
Further, it solidly shows that this creative phenomenon was not confined to
Harlem, but was global in scope.
Watson, Steven. The Harlem Renaissance: Hub of African-American
Culture, 1920-1930. New York: Pantheon Books, 1995. (700.89 W342)
This concise volume gives one of the best overviews of the Harlem Renaissance.
With its concise and very readable format, one does not need to have prior knowledge
of the Harlem Renaissance to navigate through the information presented. The
sidebars, which include illustrations, Harlem slang, poems, and little known
details, add spice to the already interesting text.
"The Chronology: Harlem Renaissance, 1920-1930" (201-208) is a must-read.
It adds much to the value and completeness of the volume.
Floyd, Samuel A., Jr.(editor). Black Music in the Harlem
Renaissance: A Collection of Essays. New York: Greenwood Press, 1990.
(780.8996 B627)
This volume features essays on a variety of subjects pertaining to African American
music during the Harlem Renaissance. The Renaissance is generally treated as
a literary movement; however, after one reads the various essays in this volume
it is evident that music was extremely important to the movement. An excellent
bibliography of the music during the Renaissance is included.
Locke, Alain. The Negro
and His Music and Negro Art: Past and Present. New York: Arno Press,
1969. (780.973 L814A)
This classic, by one who is often referred to as the Dean of the Harlem
Renaissance, covers an expanse of black music from a period before 1830 to the
1930s. It sheds light on three types of music: folk, popular, and classical.
Of particular interest are those chapters (70-142) covering "Jazz and the
Jazz Age" and "The Future of Negro Music". The discussion questions
that follow each chapter ensure that the essential content is highlighted and
comprehended.
Negro Art: Past and Present is also included in this volume. Read
chapter VII, "The Negro Takes His Place in American Art" (59-82).
Southern, Eileen. The Music of Black Americans: A History.
New York: W. W. Norton and Co., 1971. (780.973 S727)
This is an historical survey of the music of Africans Americans dating from
1619. The sections of this volume that are particularly useful for this Guide
cover chapters XIII-XV (374-485). The chapters are preceded by a useful chronology
of important events beginning with 1920.
Spencer, Jon Michael. The New Negroes and Their Music:
The Success of the Harlem Renaissance. Knoxville: University of Tennessee
Press, 1997. (780.8996 S745)
Most studies of the Harlem Renaissance focus on its literature, but Spencer
offers the reader a new interpretation of this period by focusing on its music.
Locke, Alain LeRoy (editor).
The New Negro. New York: Atheneum, 1968. (301.4519 L814A4)
This volume, which was edited by Alain Locke, immediately became a definitive
anthology of the New Negro movement. It includes the contributions of 34 writers.
The following individuals are included: Alain Locke,
Rudolph Fisher, Jean
Toomer, Zora Neale Hurston, Bruce
Nugent, Langston Hughes, Georgia
Johnson, Angelina Grimke, Lewis
Alexander,
Montgomery Gregory, Jessie
Fauset, Willis Richardson, Gwendolyn
Bennett, and Kelly Miller.
Vincent, Theodore G.(editor). Voices of a Black Nation:
Political Journalism in the Harlem Renaissance. Lawrenceville, NJ: African
World Press, INC., 1991. (305.896 V889)
"This collection of writings from the black movement press of the twenties
and on through the thirties provides valuable insight into the major political
and ideological currents among black groups of that time, as well as the means
of persuasion employed by black journalists during this significant era."
(Chrisman, 16) These historical documents offer insight on where the black press
stood on issues and the significant role it has played to record the black struggle
during this period.
The Appendix includes a list of African American news agencies, magazines and
newspapers of the period.
Hill, Anthony. Pages from the Harlem Renaissance: A
Chronicle of Performance. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, 1996. (971.092 J13ZH)
This historical and critical analysis of "J. A Jacksons Page"
in Billboard documents the major accomplishments of black performers of the
1920s in all aspects of show business. Jackson was the first African American
to edit a column (1920-1925) in Billboard magazine and we rely on his writings
for important information on this vital and significant period in black entertainment.
Harris, Leonard, editor. The Philosophy of Alain Locke:
The Harlem Renaissance and Beyond. Philadelphia: Temple University Press,
1989. (191.9 L814ZH)
"In this collection of essays many previously unpublished
by American philosopher Alain Locke, Harris,
in his substantial introduction and
concluding chapter, describes Lockes
life, evaluates his role as an American philosopher and theoretician of the
Harlem Renaissance
and outlines his
ideas. This is the first book
to focus on Lockes philosophical contributions." (Callaloo, Fall/1990,
941)
Fauset, Jessie Redmond.
The Chinaberry Tree and Selected Writings. Boston: Northeastern
University Press, 1994. (Fiction)
A novel dealing with the private lives of educated colored Americans
untouched by any but very casual contacts with whites. The story concerns two
cousins, both tainted with the blot of illegitimacy which threatens to wreck
their happiness. (Book Review Digest, 1932)
Fauset, Jessie Redmond. Comedy:
American Style. New York: AMS Press, [no date]. (Fiction)
The story of a group of near-white colored people living in Philadelphia, and
the tragedies which resulted from the short-sightedness of one woman, who herself
insisted on "passing" and tried to force her husband and children
to do likewise. (Book Review Digest, 1933)
Fauset, Jessie Redmond. Plum
Bun: A Novel Without a Moral. Boston: Beacon Press, 1990. (Fiction)
Angela Morgan is an educated colored girl fair enough to pass as white. Changing
her name she goes to New York to live in Greenwich Village, and embarks on an
unhappy love affair with a white man. Her younger sister, who is unmistakably
colored, also goes to New York, but lives in Harlem and the sisters rarely meet.
Anthony Cross enters the lives of both girls but does not know they are sisters.
He too is "passing." A complicated situation arises, causing the three
much pain before their problems of love and color are adjusted. (Book Review
Digest, 1929)
Fauset, Jessie Redmond. There
is Confusion. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1989. (Fiction)
The Negro struggling for expression and social betterment is the theme of this
book. The Marshalls, a wealthy [and] ambitious family of Negroes, form the nucleus
of a group of their race. The story develops around them. There is Joanna Marshall,
talented in music and desirous of fame, with her great love for the handsome
indolently rebellious Peter Bye, a descendant of an old honored family of slaves.
Her stirring up in him of ambition for success and their difficult romance shares
the interest with poor little Maggie Ellsworths tragedy and subsequent
happiness. It is a picture of Negro life as it is lived
among the educated
classes. (Book Review Digest, 1924)
Fisher, Rudolph. The
Conjure-Man Dies: A Mystery of Dark Harlem. Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press, 1992. (Fiction)
The Conjure Man Dies is a mystery story that reveals to the reader
the urban social world of Harlem as it carries him through a labyrinth of intrigue
to the final surprise ending. Rudolph Fishers mystery novel is the first
of the genre written by a black American, and his achievement serves to challenge
the stereotype roles that blacks played in mystery fiction and films of white
writers. Fishers book is the distant forerunner of the black detective
fiction of Chester Himes. (Kellner, The Harlem Renaissance: A Historical
Dictionary for the Era)
Hughes, Langston. Not
Without Laughter. New York: Macmillan, 1995. (Fiction)
Sandy, son of Annjee and nocount, blues-singing Jim-boy, and grandson
of good old Aunt Hager, grows up in a small Kansas town. Sandys Aunt Tempy
has become a very proper person, aping the ways of white folks and scornful
of "niggers; his young Aunt Harriet is a talented and gay little
girl who takes what she wants of pleasure and earns vaudeville success as a
blues-singer. Sandy himself is the only one of the family ambitious to finish
his education and really do something to help his race. (Book Review Digest,
1930)
Knopf, Mary. The Sleeper Wakes: Harlem Renaissance Stories
by Women. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1993. (Fiction)
This volume is a collection of twenty-eight stories by fourteen women
whose works were published in the major black magazines of the period. Included
among this fourteen are: Gwendolyn Bennett
(48-54), Marita Bonner (95-123), Jessie
Redmon Fauset (1-39), Angelina Weld Grimke
(124-145), Zora Neale Hurston (227-249), and
Georgia Douglas Johnson (55-59).
The author states that "most of the stories that appear in this anthology
were originally printed in African-American magazines during the Harlem Renaissance.
And with the exception of the stories by Zora
Neale Hurston, Alice Dunbar-Nelson, and Marita
Bonner, none has been reprinted since its original magazine publication."
(Knopf, xv)
The author concentrated on the female writers because there was so little information
available as compared to the male writers of the Harlem Renaissance.
See the Biographical Notes (267-272).
Larsen, Nella. Quicksand and Passing.
New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1986. (Fiction)
Quicksand
Helga Crane is an intelligent, attractive young woman of mixed Negro and Danish
blood. She is teaching in a large colored school in the South. Sick of it, she
comes to New York to live for a time with a friend in fashionable Harlem. Then
follows an interlude in Denmark. Helga refuses a Danish husband and, returning
to New York, finds the one man she might have loved already married to her friend.
She plunges at last into marriage with a colored evangelist. Her formless ambitions
are thereafter stifled in repeated childbirths. (Book Review Digest, 1928)
Passing
The story of two fair-skinned Negroes both white enough to be Caucasians. Clare
Kendry is living a dangerous life "passing" in white society, and
married to a man who is ignorant of her Negro blood. A chance meeting with Irene
Redfield, a childhood friend who has remained loyal to her race, inspires Clare
with a longing to associate with her own people. The tragic climax occurs at
a Harlem party where Clare is discovered by her white husband. (Book Review
Digest, 1929)
McCluskey, John A., Jr. City of Refuge: The Collected
Stories of Rudolph Fisher. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press,
1991. (Fiction)
The purpose of this volume is to present a collection of the published
works of Dr. Rudolph Fisher and to give an overview
of his life and of the themes addressed in his fiction.
The title for this collection was taken from Fishers first short story,
"The City of Refuge," which was first published in the Atlantic
Monthly in 1925. This story is part of a group of those that dramatize
the ambitions and woes of the newcomer to Harlem.
McKay, Claude. Home to Harlem. Boston: Northeastern
University Press, 1987. (Fiction)
Jake Brown drifts home from France to Harlem via England. Harlem is his happy
hunting ground for liquor, laughter and love. On Jakes first night home
he meets a little brown girl at the Baltimore cabaret. He loses her in the morning,
and searches for her intermittently in all the recesses of Harlem nightlife,
until he finds her again. The story has little plot, but gives authentic pictures
of the Negros own happyland in New York. (Book Review Digest, 1928)
Schuyler, George S. Black No More. New York:
Modern Library, 1999. (Fiction)
A satire
on the subject of color and race prejudice in this country.
Dr. Crookman, a Negro physician, discovers a depigmentation process whereby,
over night, a black man may become a veritable blonde. Since his fees are small,
the whole Negro population rapidly turns white, changes names, and intermarries
with whites. When the babies come, Dr. Crookman bleaches them, too, in lying-in
hospitals. The result is that blondes suffer in time the same prejudices hitherto
enjoyed by colored folk; and all the "best" people dye their skins
dark to achieve the new exclusive race distinction of a brown complexion. (Book
Review Digest, 1931)
Toomer, Jean. Cane.
New York; Liveright, 1993. (Fiction)
A Southern miscellany of short stories and sketches some of them
fragmentary, with verses interspersed and one long drama. They all center about
the emotional life of the Negro, with the emphasis placed on its sensual side.
Georgia and the black belt of Washington form the backgrounds. (Book Review
Digest, 1923)
Wall, Cheryl A., editor. Zora Neale Hurston: Novels
and Stories. New York: Library of America, 1995. (Fiction)
This volume includes the four novels that were published by Hurston
along with a selection of short stories. It includes a Glossary of Harlem
Slang (1008-1010).
Along with its companion,
Folklore, Memoirs, and Other Writings
(92 H967a4) one gets the full range and the
best of her writings in one set.
White, Walter. Fire in the Flint. Athens: University
of Georgia Press, 1995. (Fiction)
Written by a Georgian [Black], this novel has for its theme the problem
of race relations in the South. Dr. Kenneth Harper, intelligent and better educated
than most of his white towns-men, comes back from his training in the North
to establish a practice in his hometown. His attempt to live by his philosophy
of tolerance and friendliness fail utterly. His duties as a doctor quickly bring
him to a knowledge of the ignorance, unreasoning hatred and bitter persecution
flourishing in the town. His sisters rape and his brothers murder
rouse him to vengeance. Contrary to his impulses, he nevertheless heeds an urgent
call to the bedside of a sick white woman, saves her, and steps out of the house
into the hands of a lynching, howling mob of whites who misunderstood his visit.
(Book Review Digest, 1924)
Ellington, Edward Kennedy.
Music is My Mistress. New York: Da Capo Press, Inc., 1976. (92 E45)
Ellingtons story is divided into eight acts, each of which is devoted
to a long string of friends and musicians. It is the anecdotes about those friends
and musicians that move the story and give it its rich texture. The memoirs
are every bit Ellingtoncosmopolitan, articulate, and full of wit. The
appendices are full of his honors and awards, as well as a selective discography.
Hasse, John Edward. Beyond Category: The Life and Genius
of Duke Ellington. New York: Da Capo Press, 1995. (92 E45H)
This is an essential Ellington Reader that not only delves into Ellingtons
life, but offers an assessment of his musical achievements. The author relied
on sourcesletters, business records, photographs, and musical manuscriptsin
the Duke Ellington archives at the Smithsonian
Institution. Both the novice and the devoted fan of Ellingtons music will
enjoy this biography.
Hemenway, Robert E. Zora Neale Hurston: A Literary Biography.
Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1980. (92 H967H)
Hemenway in his beautifully written, well researched, and highly commendable
biography accurately presents the life of a highly individualistic Harlem Renaissance
writer who was every bit her own woman. In addition, he offers clear, literary
criticism. Hurston was ahead of her time in the defense of black culture as
being aesthetically rich, although different from white culture. Throughout
her life, Zora Neale Hurston remained close
to the subjects of her literature, the black masses.
Hughes, Langston. The
Big Sea: An Autobiography. New York: Hill and Wang, 1993 (92 H8925)
This is an autobiography of the one of the Harlem Renaissances better
known and possibly the most prolific luminaries. The language and style makes
it easy for the reader to follow his many adventures and successes during the
early years of the Harlem Renaissance.
Hughes, Langston. I
Wonder As I Wander: An Autobiographical Journey. New York: Hill and Wang,
1993. (92 H8925A2)
This second volume of Langston Hughes autobiography covers roughly seven
years (1931-1938) of his life. This engaging book offers the reader an opportunity
to vicariously visit Russia, Spain, China, and Japan through the eyes and adventures
of Hughes personal narratives.
Kerman, Cynthia E. and Richard Eldridge. The Lives of
Jean Toomer: A Hunger for Wholeness. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University,
1989. (92 T672K)
This is a very fine and well-researched literary biography. The authors
used extensive primary and secondary materials and interviewed various people
who knew Toomer. As the reader will soon discover,
"the first striking conclusion by an observer of Toomers life is
that it was a series of lives, a segmented sequence." (Preface, xiii)
Toomers Cane was immediately hailed as a significant work
in the Harlem Renaissance. The reader will have an opportunity to delve into
Toomers life after the publication of this essential Renaissance title.
Robbins, Richard. Sidelines Activist: Charles S. Johnson
and the Struggle for Civil Rights. Jackson, MS: University Press of Mississippi,
1996. (92 J6565R)
As research director of the National Urban League, Charles S. Johnson
was referred to as an "entrepreneur" of the Harlem Renaissance. Even
some of those young artistic literary talents of the period have given deference
to him as one of "the midwives" or the Dean of the Renaissance. Johnsons
goal was to "invigorate the arts as a central expression of Negro life."
(Robbins, 49)
Wall, Cheryl A. (editor). Folklore, Memoirs, and Other
Writings: Zora Neale Hurston. New York: Library of America, 1995. (92 H967A4)
This volume brings together the best of Hurstons
folklore, memoirs, autobiography, and other writings. Along with its companion,
Novels and Stories, the reader gets the best of her writings in one set.
Dust Tracks on a Road, her autobiography, is
included as she intended for it to be published. Passages that were omitted
from the original publishing are included in this edition. These passages were
originally not included because of the political controversy that they were
expected to generate, and because of their sexual candor.
The Chronology (961-980) provides an interesting insight on the colorful life
of a pioneer in African American ethnography and Harlem Renaissance figure.
White, Walter Francis. A Man Called White: The Autobiography
of Walter White. Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, 1995. (92 W591)
This is the autobiography of one who rose to the rank of Executive Secretary
of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). White
fought for the rights of Blacks, and spent his entire adult life trying to improve
the state of race relations. He also wrote the first definitive text on lynching,
The Rope and Faggot, and in so doing he risked his life time and
again gathering evidence on lynching, acts of discrimination, and other mistreatments
to Blacks. This autobiography gives a vivid view of race relations during the
first half of the twentieth century.
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