Harlem Renaissance
Label
Harlem Renaissance
Name
Harlem Renaissance
Focus
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Incoming Resources
- Voices from the Harlem Renaissance, edited by Nathan Irvin Huggins
- Remember me to Harlem, the letters of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, edited by Emily Bernard
- Jean Toomer and the Harlem Renaissance, edited by Geneviève Fabre and Michel Feith
- Rereading the Harlem renaissance, race, class, and gender in the fiction of Jessie Fauset, Zora Neale Hurston, and Dorothy West, Sharon L. Jones
- The Harlem group of Negro writers, Melvin B. Tolson ; edited by Edward J. Mullen
- The new Negro, the life of Alain Locke, Jeffrey C. Stewart
- On the shoulders of giants, my journey through the Harlem Renaissance, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar with Raymond Obstfeld
- Harlem renaissance, Nathan Irvin Huggins
- Critical essays on James Weldon Johnson, edited by Kenneth M. Price and Lawrence J. Oliver
- Remember me to Harlem, the letters of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, 1925-1964, edited by Emily Bernard
- Free within ourselves, the Harlem Renaissance, by Geoffrey Jacques
- Gay voices of the Harlem Renaissance, A.B. Christa Schwarz
- The Harlem Renaissance, Kevin Hillstrom
- Deep river, music and memory in Harlem Renaissance thought, Paul Allen Anderson
- Papers, 1921-1969, Countee Cullen ; processed for microfilming by Florence E. Borders
- The new Negroes and their music, the success of the Harlem Renaissance, Jon Michael Spencer
- Women of the Harlem renaissance, Cheryl A. Wall
- Black protest poetry, polemics from the Harlem renaissance and the sixties, Margaret Ann Reid ; foreword by Nikki Giovanni
- The Harlem renaissance, the one and the many, Mark Helbling
- Unnatural selections, eugenics in American modernism and the Harlem Renaissance, Daylanne K. English
- This waiting for love, Helene Johnson, poet of the Harlem Renaissance, edited with an introduction by Verner D. Mitchell ; foreword by Cheryl A. Wall ; afterword by Abigail McGrath
- You don't know us negroes and other essays, Zora Neale Hurston ; edited and with an introduction by Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Genevieve West
- The Harlem renaissance in black and white, George Hutchinson
- Temples for tomorrow, looking back at the Harlem Renaissance, edited by Geneviève Fabre and Michel Feith
- On the shoulders of giants, [an audio & musical journey through the Harlem Renaissance], by Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Vol. 4
- Harlem Renaissance, William S. McConnell, book editor
- Analysis and assessment, 1980-1994, edited with introductions by Cary D. Wintz
- Color, sex & poetry, three women writers of the Harlem Renaissance, Gloria T. Hull
- Enter the new Negroes, images of race in American culture, Martha Jane Nadell
- Looking for Harlem, urban aesthetics in African American literature, Maria Balshaw
- Zora Neale Hurston, a heart with room for every joy, a presentation of Films for the Humanities & Sciences ; written and produced by Paul Iacono ; executive producer, Frank Batavick ; Tranquilo Producciones ; producer, Fernanda Dominguez ; director, Pablo Garcia
- A beautiful pageant, African American theatre, drama, and performance in the Harlem Renaissance, 1910-1927, David Krasner
- From Harlem to Paris, Black American writers in France, 1840-1980, Michel Fabre
- Artists and writers of the Harlem Renaissance, Wendy Hart Beckman
- Pages from the Harlem Renaissance, a chronicle of performance, Anthony D. Hill
- Black culture and the Harlem Renaissance, Cary D. Wintz
- The Portable Harlem Renaissance reader, edited and with an introduction by David Levering Lewis
- Paul Robeson, a life of activism and art, Lindsey R. Swindall
- Extraordinary people of the Harlem Renaissance, P. Stephen Hardy & Sheila Jackson Hardy
- Harlem speaks, a living history of the Harlem Renaissance, [compiled by] Cary D. Wintz
- Within the circle, an anthology of African American literary criticism from the Harlem Renaissance to the present, edited by Angelyn Mitchell
- African fundamentalism, a literary and cultural anthology of Garvey's Harlem Renaissance, compiled and edited by Tony Martin
- African-American concert dance, the Harlem Renaissance and beyond, John O. Perpener III
- Dust tracks on a road, Zora Neale Hurston ; with a foreword by Maya Angelou
- A Hubert Harrison reader, edited with introduction and notes by Jeffrey B. Perry
- Women artists of the Harlem Renaissance, edited by Amy Helene Kirschke
- Black writers interpret the Harlem Renaissance, edited with introductions by Cary D. Wintz
- Passing novels in the Harlem Renaissance, an alternative concept of African American identity, Mar Gallego
- Augusta Savage, the shape of a sculptor's life, Marilyn Nelson ; afterword by Tammi Lawson
- Shimmy shimmy shimmy like my sister Kate, looking at the Harlem Renaissance through poems, [edited by] Nikki Giovanni
Outgoing Resources
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