The Making of the New Negro: Black Authorship, Masculinity, and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance (original) (raw)
Review of Anna Pochmara’s The Making of the New Negro: Black Authorship, Masculinity, and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance (Amsterdam: Amsterdam UP, 2011)
Antoni Górny
View PDFchevron_right
Jeffrey O. G. Ogbar, ed., The Harlem Renaissance Revisited: Politics, Arts, and Letters (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010). Reviewed in Journal of American History 98 (2011): 853-854
Clare Corbould
View PDFchevron_right
A City within a City: The Harlem Renaissance and the Flowering of the African American Lierary Tradition
James Tsaaior
View PDFchevron_right
Harlem to Infinity: An Intellectual History and critique of historical frameworks on the New Negro Renaissance
Jeryl Raphael
2021
View PDFchevron_right
She Voices Them: Evidence of Black Feminism in Black Women’s Harlem Renaissance Literature
danielle carr
2016
View PDFchevron_right
The “Vagabond Black” Renaissance
Pamela Caughie
2017
View PDFchevron_right
English 353 -- African American Literature to the Harlem Renaissance (Fall 2024)
Joe Lockard
2024
View PDFchevron_right
Capitalizing on White Crazes for Things Black": The Racial and Gender Politics of the New Negro Movement
Borni Lafi
2017
View PDFchevron_right
Introduction: The Harlem Renaissance in an Inter-American Perspective
Astrid Haas
FIAR: Forum for Inter-American Research, 2014
View PDFchevron_right
"To Train them for the Work: Manhood, Morality, and Black Conduct Discourse in Antebellum New York.” In Timothy Buckner and Peter Caster, eds. Fathers, Preachers, Rebels, Men: Black Masculinity in U.S. History and Literature, 1790-1945. Columbus, OH: Ohio State University Press, 2011: 60-79.
Erica L Ball
View PDFchevron_right
Review of African American Literary Studies: New Texts, New Approaches, New Challenges. Amerikastudien/American Studies 55.4 (2010)
Anna Pochmara
2012
View PDFchevron_right
The Harlem Renaissance
Tracy J Prince
History in Dispute--American Social and Political Movements, 1900-1945: Pursuit of Progress, 2000
View PDFchevron_right
Thematics of Interracial Violence in Selected Harlem Renaissance Novels
Shadi Neimneh
Papers on Language and Literature
View PDFchevron_right
The Past, Present, and Future of African American Literary History
Michael Basseler
2019
View PDFchevron_right
Roots of the Black Chicago Renaissance: New Negro Writers, Artists, and Intellectuals, 1893–1930
Ian Rocksborough-Smith
Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1998-), 2021
View PDFchevron_right
"African American Writing until 1930" in _Cambridge History of Gay & Lesbian Literature_ (2014)
GerShun Avilez
The Cambridge History of Gay and Lesbian Literature, 2014
View PDFchevron_right
MASCULINITIES IN BLACK AND WHITE: Manliness and Whiteness in (African) American Literature.
Panos Gerakis
View PDFchevron_right
Erotic Revolutionaries: Black Women, Sexuality and Popular Culture by Shayne Lee, and: Bulldaggers, Pansies, and Chocolate Babies: Performance, Race, and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance by James F Wilson
Katrina McDonald
Callaloo, 2013
View PDFchevron_right
ENG 337 - African-American Writing, 1878-1945
Karsten Piep
View PDFchevron_right
“A (Black) City Upon a Hill": The New Negro Black Consciousness Grows up in Harlem
James P Padilioni Jr
View PDFchevron_right
The Black studies reader
Claudine Michel
2004
View PDFchevron_right
Becoming African Americans: Black Public Life in Harlem, 1919-1939 (Harvard University Press, 2009)
Clare Corbould
2009
View PDFchevron_right
“International Contexts of the Negro Renaissance.” In Cambridge Companion to the Harlem Renaissance, ed. George Hutchinson, 2007. 41-54.
Michael Chaney
View PDFchevron_right
The Negrophilic Desire. Arthur Jafa Against the Colonial Eroticism of Black Masculinity
Norman Ajari
Minorit'Art, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
Reaping Something New: African American Transformations of Victorian Literature. Daniel Hack. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2017. Pp. ix+284
Melissa Shields Jenkins
Modern Philology, 2018
View PDFchevron_right
Harlem Renaissance and its Discontents
Ayşegül Yayla Wierdsma
View PDFchevron_right
RUNNING HEAD: MANIFESTO OF THE NEW NEGRO Manifesto of the New Negro: How is the crusade for social, political, and economic equality for African Americans during the Harlem Renaissance revealed in Langston Hughes’ “I Too Sing America?”
John Blanding
View PDFchevron_right
BLACK AMERICA: Alcuni testi in biblioteca 2017
Arnaldo Testi
View PDFchevron_right
The Harlem Renaissance as Social Innovation
Elizebeth Stewart
View PDFchevron_right
“Maneuvers of Silence and the Task of ‘New Negro Womanhood’.” _JNT: Journal of Narrative Theory_, Vol. 42, Issue 1, Winter 2012, pp. 47-69.
Emily M Hinnov, Ph.D.
View PDFchevron_right
Harlem Renaissance: An Exploration of how Harlem became the "Black Metropolis"
Foteini Patsarou
View PDFchevron_right
Is the Harlem Renaissance still Relevant? History of Harlem Renaissance and its impact on Modern African American Culture
Jeffery Boadu
View PDFchevron_right
Making the Slave Anew: History and the Archive in New Negro Renaissance Poetry.” In A History of the Harlem Renaissance, ed. Rachel Farebrother and Miriam Thaggert (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 38-54
Clare Corbould
2021
View PDFchevron_right
Beyond Blackface: African Americans and the Creation of American Popular Culture, 1890–1930
Theodoric Manley
Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2012
View PDFchevron_right
Zora Neale Hurston’s Controversial Relation to the Harlem Renaissance
Salam Alali
International Journal of Language and Literary Studies
View PDFchevron_right