Learners will
demonstrate an understanding of the role the Harlem Renaissance played in Black
activism against segregation and more overt forms of racism and violence
directed at African-Americans.
By answering one essential question and several secondary questions through an exploration of sites dedicated to the Harlem Renaissance, students will not only learn about the music, art, and literature that exploded in the 1920s, but also connect the Harlem Renaissance to the larger fight for equality and as a precursor in many ways to the Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s and 60s.
Students will then compose answers either in essay form or develop a presentation with answers delivered by one historical Harlem Renaissance character.
Subject Matter Content
Standard: 11.5 Students analyze the major political, social, economic,
technological, and cultural developments of the 1920s.
[5] Describe the Harlem
Renaissance and new trends in literature, music, and art, with special
attention to the work of writers (e.g., Zora Neale Hurston, Langston Hughes).
Essential Question: How did African-Americans in the early part of the 20th
century use music, art, and literature to deal with and resist the overt and
covert segregation and racist violence they encountered in the South and North?
Subsidiary Questions:
2. Who were some of the
main players on the Harlem Renaissance scene?
3. What role did
music play in the Harlem Renaissance?
4. How did artists
use poetry as a vehicle for protest and social change?
5. How did Harlem
Renaissance artists use their media to dispel the notion that Black people were
unable to be creative voices?
6. What two major
world events caused the power of the Harlem Renaissance to wane?
7. Which American
music styles owe their origins literally to African-American communities?
8. How did the Harlem Renaissance affect the politics of
the decades leading up to the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s?
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