Keyword [The Harlem Renaissance] Result: 1 - 20 | Page: 1 of 2 |
| 1. | The Meditation On Racial Identity And The Expression Of Its Complicated Psychology |
| 2. | On The Themes Revealed In The Harlem Renaissance Black Woman Writer Fauset's Novels, The Historical Causes And Their Historical Values |
| 3. | The Harlem Renaissance |
| 4. | Identity And Race-conscious |
| 5. | On The Harlem Renaissance Of The Afro |
| 6. | The White Element In The Harlem Renaissance |
| 7. | Racial Consciousness: A Study Of Black Art In The Harlem Renaissance |
| 8. | Stepping out on faith: Representing spirituality in African American literature from the Harlem Renaissance to the Civil Rights Movement |
| 9. | The new black: Sartorial, corporeal and sexual politics in the Harlem Renaissance |
| 10. | Modernization and corporate bodies from Reconstruction to the Harlem Renaissance |
| 11. | Black Ashkenaz and the almost promised land: Yiddish literature and the Harlem Renaissance |
| 12. | Performing artists of the Harlem Renaissance: Resistance, identity, and meaning in the life and work of Fredi Washington from 1920 to 1950 |
| 13. | The 'Old Songs Hymnal': Harry Burleigh and his spirituals during the Harlem Renaissance |
| 14. | Automatic aesthetics: Race, technology, and poetics in the Harlem Renaissance and American New Poetry (James Weldon Johnson, Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen) |
| 15. | The New Negro of Jazz: New Orleans, Chicago, New York, the First Great Migration, & the Harlem Renaissance, 1890-1930 |
| 16. | Fighting for identity: A. Philip Randolph's search for class -consciousness in the age of the Harlem Renaissance |
| 17. | Independent women: Black women as consumers in literature written from slavery to the Harlem Renaissance |
| 18. | Propaganda Wars: Reconstructing Cultural Identity through the Drama of the Celtic Revival and the Harlem Renaissance |
| 19. | Benevolent economies: An exploration of literary patronage during the Harlem Renaissance (Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston) |
| 20. | What beauty is their own: The significance of 'Fire!!' in the Harlem Renaissance |
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