A Renaissance in Harlem

by
Edition: 1st
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1999-11-01
Publisher(s): Bard
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Summary

Established to create jobs during the Depression, the Work Projects Administration sent writers into the neighborhoods and alleyways of Harlem to capture its distinctive voices during its most flamboyant, socially active and aesthetically vibrant era. It was a time when Harlem was Mecca, as vital as any world capital, surging with a tide of Negro migrants in search of the American Dream. The 1930s heralded the greatest period of self-discovery in African-American history after the Civil War and before the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.<P>In this illuminating document, we are introduced to a West Indian conjure man known for his infallible charms and herbal remedies; a dancer at the Apollo Theater who mourns the untimely death of the entertainer who inspired her; a domestic worker determined to fight for fair wages and better treatment. And we meet Matt Henson at his retirement from his government job, still denied official recognition for his status as the first American to plant the United States flag on the North Pole.<P>Enter the bars, the nightclubs, the beauty shops, the street markets, the employment offices and homes. Visit with fish vendors, war veterans, Pullman porters, prostitutes, and countless others. Come listen to the memorable sounds of swing music, the singing and shouting of church choirs, and the lonely plea of a mournful spiritual.<P><I>A Renaissance In Harlem</I> is an essential addition to the historical record of the African-American experience, a startling re-creation of a lost era in the life of New York City, and a valuable look at the early writings of two masters of American literature. Filled with humor, compassion, outrage and hope, it is an uplifting celebration of a place and people integral to the American story.

Table of Contents

Introduction: History from the Ground Up 1(20)
Part 1 Two Harlems
Minstrel Show
21(3)
Whites Invade Harlem
24(9)
Levi Hurbert
Part 2 Lost Manuscripts
Visible Men
33(3)
Eddie's Bar
36(3)
Ralph Ellison
Colonial Park
39(5)
Ralph Ellison
Sweet the Monkey
44(2)
Ralph Ellison
The Street
46(4)
Ralph Ellison
My People
50(4)
Ralph Ellison
Clarence Weinstock
Pluto
54(5)
Dorothy West
Rent Parties
59(9)
Frank Byrd
Buffet Flat
68(4)
Frank Byrd
Slick Reynolds
72(3)
Frank Byrd
Laundry Workers
75(3)
Vivian Morris
Negro Laundry Workers
78(7)
Vivian Morris
Part 3 Pushcarts, Thursday Girls, and Other Workers
Afternoon in a Pushcart Peddlers' Colony
85(5)
Frank Byrd
Street Cries and Cries
90(5)
Frank Byrd
Terry Roth
Homey the Vegetable Man
95(2)
Frank Byrd
Kingfish
97(12)
Marion Charles Hatch
Life in the Harlem Markets
109(1)
Frank Byrd
The Harlem Market
109(11)
Frank Byrd
Fatso the Slickster, Pullman Porters', and Dining Car Folklore
120(5)
Frank Byrd
Fatso's Mistake
125(3)
Frank Byrd
Chef Watkins's Alibi
128(2)
Frank Byrd
Chef Sampson's Icebox
130(2)
Frank Byrd
West Indies
132(3)
Ellis Williams
Worker's Alliance
135(1)
Vivian Morris
Laundry Worker's Choir
135(6)
Vivian Morris
Thursday Girls
141(5)
Vivian Morris
Slave Market
146(7)
Vivian Morris
Domestic Workers Union
153(4)
Vivian Morris
Domestic Price Wars
157(4)
Vivian Morris
Private Life of Big Bess
161(11)
Frank Byrd
Betty
172(3)
Frank Byrd
Commercial Enterprise
175(3)
Vivian Morris
Dancing Girls
178(2)
Vivian Morris
Finger Waves and Nu Life Pomades
180(9)
Vivian Morris
Part 4 Uptown gods, Kings, and Other Spiritual Entities
God Was Happy
189(9)
Vivian Morris
Peace in the Kingdom
198(6)
Frank Byrd
Father Divine Comes to Harlem
204(6)
Levi Hurbert
Emancipation
210(4)
Frank Byrd
Divine Is Gawd
214(4)
Herman Spector
Temple of Grace
218(8)
Dorothy West
Deities and Their Duesenbergs
226(2)
Vivian Morris
Holy and Sanctified
228(5)
Vivian Morris
Obeah
233(7)
Ellis Williams
Conjure Man
240(4)
Vivian Morris
Ghost Story
244(9)
Dorothy West
Part 5 People, Places, and Things
Amateur Night at the Apollo
253(7)
Dorothy West
Almost Made King
260(11)
Vivian Morris
Cocktail Party
271(9)
Dorothy West
Cliff Webb and Billie Day
280(3)
Frank Byrd
Matt Henson Retires
283(4)
Theodore Poston
Race Horse Row
287(5)
Vivian Morris
Harlem Hospital
292(3)
Vivian Morris
Angelo Herndon
295(4)
Theodore Poston
Swing Clubs
299
Vivian Morris

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