00:00:00
hi
00:00:01
i'm clint smith and this is crash course
00:00:03
black american history the harlem
00:00:05
renaissance also known as the new negro
00:00:08
movement was an outpouring of artistic
00:00:10
production and expression that took
00:00:12
place shortly after world war one
00:00:14
and lasted into the mid-1930s
00:00:17
it was one of the richest most vibrant
00:00:20
and most culturally generative artistic
00:00:22
periods in american history
00:00:24
and the work that emerged from this
00:00:25
period continues to shape the landscape
00:00:28
of american arts and letters today
00:00:31
in this episode we're going to explore
00:00:33
some of the writers artists and
00:00:35
musicians who turned harlem into a
00:00:37
world-renowned hub of art and culture
00:00:40
and delve into the factors that brought
00:00:42
them all together in the first place
00:00:46
let's start the show
00:00:48
[Music]
00:00:56
so a few episodes ago we discussed the
00:00:58
great migration
00:00:59
the decades when many black americans
00:01:01
moved to the north for better economic
00:01:03
opportunities and to escape domestic
00:01:05
terrorism in the south
00:01:08
we also talked about the red summer of
00:01:09
1919 where black veterans were targeted
00:01:12
by white supremacist groups police
00:01:14
officers and mobs upon their return from
00:01:17
world war one
00:01:19
as these things were happening
00:01:20
more and more people in the black
00:01:22
community
00:01:23
became increasingly politicized
00:01:25
they were tired of being treated as
00:01:27
second-class citizens and many began
00:01:30
more forcefully advocating for their
00:01:32
civil and political rights
00:01:34
large cultural shifts can not only serve
00:01:36
as a catalyst for social and political
00:01:38
change
00:01:39
but they can also spark new forms of
00:01:41
creative and artistic expression by the
00:01:44
time the first great migration was over
00:01:46
over 1.5 million black americans had
00:01:48
moved to the north
00:01:50
with 175 000 of them
00:01:52
settling into harlem
00:01:54
a single neighborhood in new york city
00:01:57
even though harlem was only three square
00:01:59
miles
00:02:00
this influx of black americans
00:02:02
turned the small area
00:02:04
into the largest concentration
00:02:06
of black people in the world
00:02:08
these communities develop new forms of
00:02:11
expression
00:02:12
that were so unique
00:02:14
so moving
00:02:15
and so unlike anything america had ever
00:02:17
seen before
00:02:18
that harlem gained both national
00:02:21
and international attention and this
00:02:23
explosion of artistic creation
00:02:25
wasn't just limited to harlem
00:02:27
it also flourished in cities like
00:02:29
chicago
00:02:31
cleveland los angeles and washington dc
00:02:35
we can separate much of the work
00:02:37
into three categories
00:02:39
visual arts
00:02:40
literary arts
00:02:42
and musical arts
00:02:43
there were so many incredible visual
00:02:45
artists who contributed to the harlem
00:02:47
renaissance
00:02:48
one of them was sculptor richmond barthe
00:02:51
who enrolled at the art institute of
00:02:52
chicago to study oil painting despite
00:02:56
not having any formal training or a high
00:02:58
school education
00:03:00
while there however he was drawn to
00:03:02
sculpting and ended up creating work
00:03:04
that betrayed the beauty of the black
00:03:06
body
00:03:07
photographer james van der zee provided
00:03:09
some of the most complete documentation
00:03:11
of african american life during this era
00:03:14
especially the emerging black middle
00:03:16
class in new york muralist and artist
00:03:19
aaron douglas used egyptian and west
00:03:21
african sources in his art to depict
00:03:23
segregation
00:03:25
and race
00:03:26
his innovative techniques drew the
00:03:28
attention of black intellectuals like
00:03:30
w.e.b du bois who would ask him to
00:03:32
provide illustrations for their journals
00:03:35
and there was meet-a-vo warrick fuller
00:03:37
an interdisciplinary artist and sculptor
00:03:40
who portrayed the black american
00:03:42
experience using african themes
00:03:44
born in philadelphia pennsylvania she
00:03:47
said her work was quote
00:03:48
of the soul
00:03:50
rather than the figure
00:03:52
she was the first african-american woman
00:03:54
to receive a u.s government commission
00:03:56
for her art
00:03:57
and of course the harlem renaissance
00:03:59
included the literary arts
00:04:02
let's go to the thought bubble
00:04:03
langston hughes was one of the most
00:04:06
famous poets of the day
00:04:07
he was born in joplin missouri in 1901
00:04:10
and lived in a variety of places across
00:04:12
the united states from illinois to ohio
00:04:16
to new york city where he spent a year
00:04:18
at columbia university
00:04:20
he also traveled abroad to europe and
00:04:22
africa while working as a seaman
00:04:25
in 1926 he published his first book of
00:04:28
poetry the weary blues while living in
00:04:30
washington dc
00:04:32
he finished his education at lincoln
00:04:34
university in pennsylvania which was a
00:04:36
historically black university where he
00:04:38
felt like he had more support
00:04:40
than he did at columbia
00:04:42
langston hughes's poetry
00:04:44
was unique because it reflected both his
00:04:46
personal experience as a black man
00:04:47
living in america
00:04:49
and the experiences of working-class
00:04:51
black people across the country
00:04:53
he strived to reflect what he thought of
00:04:56
as the authentic black experience
00:04:58
and refused to make black life look
00:05:00
happier or less painful
00:05:03
than it actually was for so many
00:05:05
and because of this
00:05:07
hughes had many critics
00:05:08
many black intellectuals believe that
00:05:11
hughes was portraying black americans in
00:05:13
a bad light
00:05:14
but in his autobiography
00:05:16
hughes responded
00:05:18
the negro critics and many of the
00:05:20
intellectuals were very sensitive about
00:05:22
their race in books
00:05:23
and still are
00:05:24
in anything that white people were
00:05:26
likely to read they wanted to put their
00:05:28
best foot forward their politely
00:05:30
polished and cultural foot
00:05:33
and only that foot
00:05:34
hughes
00:05:35
wasn't daunted by the criticism and
00:05:38
believed that his work showed black life
00:05:40
and america
00:05:41
for what it was
00:05:43
he wasn't interested in hiding anything
00:05:45
from anyone
00:05:47
thanks thoughtbubble
00:05:49
hughes wrote in his essay the negro
00:05:51
artist and the racial mountain
00:05:53
quote
00:05:54
we younger negro artists who create
00:05:57
now intend to express our individual
00:05:59
dark-skinned selves without fear
00:06:02
or shame
00:06:03
if white people are pleased
00:06:05
we're glad
00:06:06
if they are not
00:06:08
it doesn't matter
00:06:10
we know we are beautiful
00:06:12
and ugly too
00:06:14
one of my favorite poems of his
00:06:16
is entitled harlem
00:06:18
which goes
00:06:20
what happens to a dream deferred
00:06:22
does it dry up like a raisin in the sun
00:06:26
or fester like a sore
00:06:28
and then run
00:06:30
does it stink like rotten meat
00:06:33
or crust and sugar over
00:06:35
like a syrupy sweet
00:06:37
maybe
00:06:38
it just sags like a heavy load
00:06:41
or
00:06:43
does it explode
00:06:44
langston hughes was one of many famous
00:06:47
black writers during the harlem
00:06:48
renaissance in fact there were so many
00:06:51
that a special issue of the survey
00:06:53
graphic a social science and culture
00:06:55
journal was produced in 1925 to
00:06:58
commemorate the impact of harlem on the
00:07:00
american literary landscape it featured
00:07:03
scholarly writings in history and
00:07:05
sociology from some very important
00:07:07
figures in academia and research
00:07:10
one was james weldon johnson
00:07:13
a lawyer a poet an activist who is best
00:07:16
known for co-writing lift every voice
00:07:18
and sing
00:07:19
which is now known as the black national
00:07:22
anthem
00:07:23
additionally he was an active
00:07:25
participant in the naacp
00:07:27
and served as its first black executive
00:07:29
secretary from 1920
00:07:31
to 1930.
00:07:33
another writer featured in this special
00:07:34
issue was arthur schomburg
00:07:37
also sometimes known as arturo
00:07:40
schomburg a pioneer in the area of black
00:07:42
history was an afro-puerto rican man who
00:07:45
developed one of the most significant
00:07:46
collections of printed material about
00:07:48
the black diasporic experience in the
00:07:51
world his collection was acquired by the
00:07:53
new york public library and the
00:07:55
collection grew into what would become
00:07:57
the schomburg center for research in
00:07:59
black culture
00:08:00
the famous issue of the survey graphic
00:08:02
also included work from walter white a
00:08:05
lynching investigator who attempted to
00:08:07
secure passage of a federal
00:08:08
anti-lynching bill as well as pawned by
00:08:11
writers like claude mckay and county
00:08:13
cullen
00:08:14
mckay and cullen were both cornerstones
00:08:16
of the harlem renaissance literary scene
00:08:19
but
00:08:20
with divergent approaches
00:08:22
cullen who many scholars believe was the
00:08:25
person langston hughes was being
00:08:26
critical of in the negro artist and the
00:08:28
racial mountain essay embraced
00:08:30
colorblindness in his work and wrote in
00:08:32
a prose that appealed to eurocentric
00:08:34
literary sensibilities mckay
00:08:37
a jamaican immigrant proudly wrote
00:08:39
poetry in his jamaican dialect in
00:08:41
addition to what he called
00:08:43
straight english one of mckay's most
00:08:45
famous poems
00:08:46
if we must die
00:08:48
speaks to the rising sense of black
00:08:49
militancy in many parts of the black
00:08:52
community
00:08:53
it goes
00:08:55
if we must die
00:08:57
oh let us nobly die
00:08:59
so that our precious blood may not be
00:09:01
shed in vain
00:09:03
then
00:09:04
even the monsters we defy shall be
00:09:06
constrained to honor us though dead
00:09:09
the editor of this historic issue of the
00:09:11
survey graphic was elaine locke
00:09:14
locke the first black american to earn a
00:09:16
rhodes scholarship received both his
00:09:18
undergraduate degree and phd in
00:09:20
philosophy from harvard he would go on
00:09:23
to teach at howard university and
00:09:25
publish a book called the new negro
00:09:28
a manifesto and collection of essays
00:09:30
that embodied the spirit of the movement
00:09:32
and expounded upon the importance of the
00:09:34
harlem renaissance
00:09:36
locke highlighted even more black
00:09:38
literary geniuses
00:09:40
folks like gwendolyn bennett and zora
00:09:43
neale hurston bennett was a writer
00:09:46
editor and poet who studied art in the
00:09:48
united states and abroad
00:09:50
she was also assistant to the editor at
00:09:53
opportunity which was the major
00:09:55
publication of the urban league and
00:09:57
published many writers during the harlem
00:09:59
renaissance
00:10:00
hurston it wasn't fully appreciated
00:10:02
until after her death
00:10:04
was a writer known for her efforts to
00:10:06
preserve the folklore of black southern
00:10:08
life
00:10:09
she wrote often about the nuanced
00:10:11
experiences of black women best
00:10:13
exemplified in her most well-known work
00:10:15
the book
00:10:17
their eyes were watching god
00:10:19
we'll learn more about her in a few
00:10:21
episodes
00:10:22
in the area of music
00:10:24
blues and jazz revolutionized the
00:10:26
american landscape
00:10:27
blues women singers such as ma rainey
00:10:30
known as the mother of the blues and
00:10:32
bessie smith
00:10:33
known as the empress of the blues
00:10:35
used the remarkable voices to express
00:10:38
their highs
00:10:39
their lows their challenges and their
00:10:41
victories
00:10:43
making their way through the united
00:10:44
states as black women
00:10:46
they especially focused on the stories
00:10:49
of working class black life
00:10:51
and both women
00:10:52
also played an important role in
00:10:54
exposing larger audiences
00:10:56
to the music coming out of black
00:10:58
communities
00:10:59
another important jazz musician during
00:11:01
this period was duke ellington
00:11:03
he helped popularize big band style jazz
00:11:05
music in the united states and produced
00:11:08
many concerts at carnegie hall in new
00:11:09
york city
00:11:10
other legendary musicians of the era
00:11:12
included yubi blake one of the first
00:11:14
black americans to compose a major
00:11:16
broadway musical
00:11:18
and billie holiday whose song strange
00:11:20
fruit is credited with being the first
00:11:22
protest song of the civil rights era
00:11:25
in fact many modern forms of music are
00:11:28
influenced by blues and jazz
00:11:30
including rock
00:11:31
pop
00:11:32
country and hip-hop we are just
00:11:35
scratching the surface of the artistic
00:11:37
outpouring of the harlem renaissance
00:11:39
there are so many artists that we could
00:11:40
have talked about today and more that
00:11:42
we'll talk about in the episodes to come
00:11:45
but what's clear
00:11:46
is that black americans have made
00:11:47
countless contributions to the cultural
00:11:50
artistic
00:11:51
musical and literary landscape of this
00:11:54
country we can see it everywhere
00:11:56
and as a writer like myself
00:11:58
i know that my work is only possible
00:12:00
because of the path that was laid by
00:12:02
these remarkable people
00:12:04
and who knows
00:12:05
maybe i'll start painting or pick up a
00:12:08
little bit of trumpet playing on the
00:12:10
side
00:12:11
or maybe not
00:12:13
thanks for watching
00:12:14
i'll see you next time
00:12:16
crash course is made possible with the
00:12:17
help of all these nice people and our
00:12:19
animation team is thought cafe crash
00:12:21
course is a complexity production and if
00:12:24
you'd like to keep crash course free for
00:12:25
everybody forever you can support the
00:12:27
series at patreon a crowdfunding
00:12:29
platform that allows you to support the
00:12:31
content that you love thank you to all
00:12:33
our patrons for making crash course
00:12:35
possible with your continued support