HARLEM STOMP! A Cultural History of the Harlem Renaissance
Laban Carrick Hill, . . Little, Brown/ Tingley, $18.95 (151pp) ISBN 978-0-316-81411-9
This energetic, elegantly designed volume documents the artistic, literary and musical surge of black culture in Harlem from 1900 to 1924, presenting the events and personalities that led to both its ascension and decline. Hill first introduces the pivotal opposing points of view of the time, that of Booker T. Washington—born into slavery, who "strongly supported the principle of nonconfrontation"—and W.E.B. Du Bois, born free, whose ideas were considered "radical" and who believed that "the Negro race must be made leaders of thought and missionaries of culture among their people." The author then weaves in other voices, solo and in groups, and brief bios of lesser-known heroes (such as Sgt. Henry Johnson, an African-American and the first American soldier—black or white—in WWI to receive the Croix de Guerre; and pioneering editor and educator Charles Spurgeon Johnson). Hill sets the backdrop for the Great Migration of blacks from South to North (illustrated with the first of Jacob Lawrence's
Reviewed on: 12/22/2003
Genre: Children's
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