
The Harlem Renaissance in the American West
Description
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Harlem Renaissance in the West: The New Negro's Western Experience will change the way students and scholars of the Harlem Renaissance view the efforts of artists, musicians, playwrights, club owners, and various other players in African American communities all over the American West to participate fully in the cultural renaissance that took hold during that time.
Reviews / Votes
"While most treatments of the renaissance period focus on the Eastern Seaboard, the impact of the renaissance on the West and Southwest have been neglected. Editors Glasrud and Wintz and the contributors to this collection do a superb job of filling in this gap...Summing Up: Essential." - C. H. Allen, Shenandoah University, CHOICE"This is an amazing collection of essays that fundamentally reshapes our understanding of an era of creativity and change that is usually seen through the lens of New York by recasting our scholarly sights westward. Not only does this work enhance our understanding of the Renaissance's impact on urban centers like Los Angeles, Denver and Kansas City but it deftly broadens our gaze to include the impact and contributions of communities as diverse as Seattle, Laramie and Minneapolis. This landmark publication marks a profound shift in the interpretation of what will never again be seen as a simply a Harlem Renaissance." - Lonnie Bunch, Director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture, is the author of Black Angelenos: The African American in Los Angeles, 1850-1950
"Cary Wintz and Bruce Glasrud have assembled a long overdue and yet remarkably revealing anthology on the Harlem Renaissance in the West. The authors convincingly establish the Renaissance as part of a national literary and artistic movement with roots in places as disparate as Lawrence, Kansas, Silver City, New Mexico, and Boise, Idaho." - Quintard Taylor, Scott and Dorothy Bullitt Professor of American History, University of Washington
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Persons
Cary D. Wintz is Professor of History at Texas Southern University. Together Cary Wintz and Bruce Glasrud are the editors of African Americans and the Presidency (Routledge).
Content
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The Harlem Renaissance in the West
Cary D. Wintz and Bruce A. Glasrud
Chapters
1. Harlem in Houston
Charles Orson Cook
2. North Texas' Black Art and Literature During the 1920s and 1930s: "The
Current Is Much Stronger"
Michael Phillips
3. The Western Black Renaissance in the Kansas City Region
Marc Rice
4. The New Negro Renaissance in Los Angeles, 1920-1940
Douglas Flamming
5. "All God's Children Got Swing": The Black Renaissance in the San Francisco
Bay Area, 1906-1941
Douglas Henry Daniels
6. Harlem Renaissance in Oklahoma
Jean Van Delinder
7. The New Negro Renaissance in Omaha and Lincoln, 1910-1940
Richard M. Breaux
8. Harlem Renaissance West: Minneapolis and St. Paul, the Twin Cities of
Minnesota
Carolyn Wedin
9. The San Antonio/Austin Renaissance: Where "the Daddies of Jazz"
Remembered the Alamo
Jeanette N. Passty
10. The Black Renaissance in the Desert Southwest
Bruce A. Glasrud and Cary D. Wintz
11. Harlem Renaissance in Denver
George H. Junne, Jr.
12. Black Renaissance in Helena and Laramie: Hatched on Top of the Rocky
Mountains
Charlotte Hinger
13. A Renaissance in Seattle and Portland
Kimberley Mangun
14. Harlem Renaissance in San Diego: New Negroes and Community
Charles P. Toombs
Harlem Renaissance in the West: A Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index
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