Image for The Black Chicago renaissance

The Black Chicago renaissance

Hine, Darlene Clark(Edited by)McCluskey, John(Edited by)
Part of the The New Black Studies Series series
See all formats and editions

Beginning in the 1930s, Black Chicago experienced a cultural renaissance that lasted into the 1950s and rivaled the cultural outpouring of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s.

The contributors to this volume analyze this prolific period of African American creativity in music, performance art, social science scholarship, and visual and literary artistic expression.

Like Harlem, Chicago had become a major destination for black southern migrants.

Unlike Harlem, Chicago was also an urban industrial center that gave a unique working-class and internationalist perspective to the cultural work being done in Chicago.

This collection's various essays discuss the forces that distinguished the Black Chicago Renaissance from the Harlem Renaissance and place the development of black culture in a national and international context.

Contributors will also provoke explorations of renaissances in other cities.

Among the topics discussed in this volume are Chicago writers Gwendolyn Brooks and Richard Wright, The Chicago Defender and Tivoli Theater, African American music and visual arts, and the American Negro Exposition of 1940.

Contributors are Hilary Mac Austin, David T. Bailey, Murry N. DePillars, Samuel A. Floyd Jr., Erik S. Gellman, Jeffrey Helgeson, Darlene Clark Hine, John McCluskey Jr., Christopher Robert Reed, Elizabeth Schlabach, and Clovis E.

Semmes.

Read More
Available
£330.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
University of Illinois Press
0252094395 / 9780252094392
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
16/06/2015
English
334 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Reprint. Previously issued in print: 2012 Description based on online resource; title from home page (viewed on March 1, 2017).