About ENGL 1220 A
Representative topic: African-American Women Writers in the Twentieth- and Twenty-first Centuries. May be repeated for credit with different content. Topics vary by offering; periodic offering at intervals that may exceed four years. Cross-listed with: CRES 1825.
Notes
Open to degree and PACE students; Cross listed with CRES 1825; Total combined enrollment = 50
Section Description
Harlem Renaissance: The Harlem Renaissance Movement is undoubtedly the first most prominent and influential Black cultural movement of the modern era. Rising amidst the racial, and social tensions that plagued the United States at the end of the first World War( 1919), a group of old and young African American writers turned Harlem into what one of the group’s mentors, James Weldon Johnson, called “ the Negro capital of the world”. This cultural movement played a great role in the emergence of the African and West Indian Negritude Movement in Paris in the early 1930s. This course explores points of connection between these two most prominent 20th-century Black cultural movements and their relevance to contemporary pan-African literary production. Authors include Claude Mckay, Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Alain Locke, Jean Toomer, Sterling Brown, Gwendolyn Bennett, Helene Johnson, Arna Bontemps, Aimé Césaire, Léopold Senghor, Léon Damas, and David Diop. This course satisfies D1 requirement.
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ENGL 1220 A is closed to new enrollment.
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