Topic Page: Harlem Renaissance

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Topic Page: Harlem Renaissance"

Transcription

1 Topic Page: Harlem Renaissance Definition: Harlem Renaissance from Philip's Encyclopedia Period of creativity, particularly in literature, among African-Americans in the 1920s. Centred in Harlem, New York City, the Renaissance produced many fine writers, such as Countee Cullen, Langston Hughes, and Claude McKay. Summary Article: Harlem Renaissance from Encyclopedia of American Studies The Harlem Renaissance was the cultural front of the New Negro movement heralded by privileged intellectual leaders during the 1920s. It was also a marker of drastic demographic change with huge political implications, and the historical occasion in which African America's expressive tendencies took on an urban cast. More broadly the Harlem Image from: Harlem Renaissance was an inspiration for, and a manifestation of, the Renaissance author Zora worldwide Négritude movement which grew out of, and in some quarters Neale Hurston,... in Africa superseded, Pan-Africanist thought. Though difficult to date precisely and the Americas: Culture, since its sources and effects were both subtle and profound, the creative flowering that centered in a relatively small corner of New York Politics, and History City is generally thought to have begun with the armistice that brought an end to World War I and to have declined when financial support for the arts dried up during the Great Depression. Apart from dates, wrangles over the meaning and measure of the Harlem Renaissance have kept scholars busy. There is little doubt that the most visible beneficiaries of this breakthrough episode in U.S. cultural history were writers such as Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Jean Toomer, Nella Larsen, and Countee Cullen. Biographies of these gifted artists suggest the range of backgrounds among those who understood themselves as participating in something unprecedented in American art. Thus, Hughes was from the rural Midwest, Hurston from an all-black township in Florida in which African folk-patterns were actively present, and Cullen and Larsen grew up in the urban North, while Jean Toomer was a child of the African American gentry as it existed in the South. Knowledge of this diversity is a good corrective to the common, but misguided, charge that the Harlem Renaissance was of interest only to a conscious elite. It is probably true that few poor Americans, and even fewer immigrants from the Caribbean and West Indies, kept abreast of contemporary belles lettres or visited the galleries in which Harlem Renaissance painters and sculptors displayed their work. The aim, however, especially as the Harlem Renaissance came into being, was to give African American people of all classes art that would inspire those downtrodden by racist laws and attitudes and contribute to the uplift of the race while the creativity of black artists attested to their humanity. The question was, what sort of art could achieve these goals? Powerful arbiters of Harlem Renaissance art such as Jessie Redmon Fauset, Benjamin Brawley, and William Stanley Braithwaite thought that stylistic innovation was off-putting, too much a case of art for art's sake. Middle-class Northerners with an uncomfortable relationship to the black masses and to the South generally, these elite critics nonetheless thought highly of the Jamaican poet Claude McKay. Though none could have known that one of his sonnets, If We Must Die would be circulated among the men involved in the Attica Prison uprising of 1971, this fact alone makes it hard to judge the Harlem Renaissance as an elite solipsistic enclave. So does the fact that the Harlem

2 Renaissance, or perhaps perceptions of the same, increased the literary opportunities given to, or won by, black writers such as Ann Petry, Richard Wright, and Margaret Walker. Even more important because of their effect on a greater number of lives, poems such as The Negro Speaks of Rivers and The Weary Blues (both the work of Langston Hughes) had a huge impact among diasporic artists searching for expressive traditions that would be modern and race-conscious in a cultural-nationalist sense. Decades later poet Amiri Baraka would acknowledge Hughes again. The groundwork for the burst of African American art and financial patronage that was dubbed a renaissance has been traced to the skill with which Booker T. Washington solicited wealthy whites' support for the Tuskegee Institute. More commonly the Harlem Renaissance is understood as a development of the mingling of artistic heritages that gifted people brought to Harlem from many parts of the United States and the Caribbean. Thus, a determinative condition for this slice of U.S. cultural history, and its powerful newness, is the movement of families and individual questers that historians have named the Great Migration North. Mandated by extreme poverty, lynchings, and other race-based oppression, this migration made rural people many of whom had been raised in relatively close contact with African folkways neighbors of Northerners, black and white. The result was a reshaping of U.S. art and life that made racial identity, rather than resistance to race-based oppression, central. In fact a useful way to think about the progress of the Harlem Renaissance is to chart the work that resulted from it in terms of confidence about asserting an Africanist heritage inflected by specific regional, gender, sexual, artistic, financial, and political contingencies. Beginning at the beginning, early works associated with the Harlem Renaissance, such as James Weldon Johnson's Lift Every Voice and Sing (the putative Negro national anthem ), are heavily indebted to European traditions. This hymn's emphasis on Western lyric and musical traditions is consonant with the talented tenth argument that art was a realm in which African Americans could demonstrate expressive talent, as well as a civic capacity for education and assimilability. Johnson relied less on European modes in such later works as God's Trombones, an appreciation and revisiting of the sermon format. In this work Johnson was close in spirit to writers such as Toomer, Hughes, and Eric Walrond, and such painters as Aaron Douglas. All were eager to explore the stylistic experimentations of European modernism as it made possible powerful new statements of African American presence. Just as complex but spiced with a wicked wit, novelists Wallace Thurman and George Schuyler crafted acute satires that recall African folktales' upsets of assumed power and authority. In contrast, delicacy and indirection were the hallmarks of female Harlem Renaissance artists such as Fauset, Dorothy West, Anne Spencer, and Georgia Johnson. The exception to this rule, the exuberant Hurston was an academy-trained ethnographer who developed a complicated relationship to the role of griot. African American editorial control of the magazines Survey Graphic, the Crisis, and Opportunity explain the literary bent of the Harlem Renaissance. Just as important is discomfort on the part of privileged African Americans with performance art such as dance, jazz, the blues, and Broadway musicals, which were thought low. Strong distaste for arts deemed vulgar or crude sprang from a commitment by leading black Americans away from so-called brutish appetites that were seen as the degrading result of poor and limited educational opportunities. Cary Wintz shows that the same outlook fueled elite critics' distaste for ghetto realism and younger Harlem Renaissance artists' depictions of the sensual vitality that could be found in African America's expressive art. In books about the music of the Harlem Renaissance, Jon Michael Spencer and Samuel A. Floyd ponder the related tendency, on the part of elite African Americans, to distinguish between high cultural products and popular hits, such as the Broadway show Shuffle Along.

3 Turning to the intellectual and aesthetic premises debated by artists associated with the Harlem Renaissance, privileged race men such as Alain Locke and W. E. B. Du Bois agreed that the New Negro was ready to repudiate racist stereotypes such as the mild old uncle and white-oriented mammy. In addition the New Negro was determined to live a life of the mind and spirit, which distanced struggles to earn self-respect from the financial programs espoused by Jamaican orator Marcus Garvey. Since Du Bois made no secret of his opposition to the charismatic Garvey, some have seen the Harlem Renaissance as an arrant attempt to quash a populist and popular political theorist with great appeal for the black masses. Locke is usually the main target of this argument, since he emphasized that the task for New Negro artists was to show that African Americans could write poetry that deserved a place beside Shelley's and paint as well as, or better than, Matisse. Just as focused on high-culture products but openly intending to use them for didactic purpose, Du Bois offered art as an alternative to Garvey's return to Africa visions. To advance their inspirational (some would say, naive) agenda, Locke and Du Bois published searching position-statements on the artist's role in a community, the merits and demerits of didactic art, and the intricacies of art for art's sake. Both men wanted black creative talents expended on sophisticated appreciations of Africa's cultural heritage in the West, the sort that would be clearly distinguishable from folk art. Locke and Du Bois's clear and repeated calls for talent to show itself and willingness to find financial support for struggling young artists were crucial encouragement for many. Locke was especially good at finding patronage for aspiring writers, even if problems sometimes arose with the arrangements he brokered. Once patronage was established, many writers associated with the Harlem Renaissance chose to travel to Europe, Africa, and the Soviet Union. Concentrating on racial identity, few produced travel literature; instead, fiction and poetry were mainstays, followed by autobiography and memoir, with less attention to drama, anthologies of African American cultural expression (for example, humor or folklore), and children's books. White patrons' interests probably influenced the themes of interest to Harlem Renaissance authors: these included the working and recreational life of poor black Americans; the complexities of passing ; the strength and courage, but also the deprivation and disease, encountered among African Americans in the rural South; the charm and insight of folk culture; racial discrimination between darker- and lighter-skinned black Americans; and the beauty experienced in the struggles and selflessness of family life. Many of these topics were handled differently by Harlem Renaissance artists who found ways to do without patrons, such as when the brilliant Wallace Thurman tried scriptwriting in Hollywood and the talented Rudolph Fisher wrote gem-like short stories while studying medicine. Stylistic innovation in matters such as the use of black dialect, a phonic or aural emphasis, evocations of African American religious practices, and a supremely lyrical prose were more common among younger Harlem Renaissance artists. A strong statement of the younger generation's position is Hughes's The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain. This essay served as a prospectus for the art magazine Fire!! During its short life, this periodical was edited by those Hurston dubbed the Niggerati : herself, Thurman, Hughes, Douglas, and Gwendolyn Bennett. Scholars' schemata of the Harlem Renaissance vary. Literary critic Houston Baker, Jr., sees the Renaissance as a modernism guided by African expressive theory rather than Freudianism or secular despair. Critic J. Martin Favor views it as a chance to probe race- or culture-based understandings of authentic blackness. Historian David Levering Lewis identifies three phases of the Harlem Renaissance. The first, and most brief, Lewis finds the most obviously red, because bohemians and socialists grew interested in the art produced by such writers as McKay and Toomer. When this interest was supported by white-owned and -operated publishing houses, the Harlem Renaissance's second phase drew attention from prominent whites such as Carl Van Vechten and Eugene O'Neill. The third

4 and last of Lewis's phases was the longest (indeed, its end point is hard to date); more important, it was the most fully self-authorizing. Since none of the cited studies makes gender issues central, it is important that scholars such as Cheryl Wall have tried to discern a feminist perspective on the art of the Harlem Renaissance. Similar work could be done on same-sex orientation among Renaissance writers, with particular attention to black masculinity, the artist's relationship to an audience (and creation thereof), and the patron-protégé nexus. Turning to American studies, the rise of African American studies programs brought the Harlem Renaissance to scholarly attention. This shift resulted in many fine individual author studies and preliminary work on gender. With trends toward interdisciplinary, internationalist, and cross-race scholarship dominating American studies at the end of the twentieth century, subsequent work attends to the journalists, sociologists, historians, and performance artists who were often financed by the patrons, prizes, and grants that have been analyzed only as they affected literary work. Future work on the Harlem Renaissance could probe the institutional factors that led to a congregation of artistic talent in one corner of Manhattan; African American faith in, and contestations of, an Arnoldian gospel of culture; and the extent to which a group of artists born in Jim Crow America enriched the artistic culture of Négritude. Portrait of Langston Hughes Gordon Parks, photographer. FSA/OWI, Library of Congress.

5 Portrait of Zora Neale Hurston Carl Van Vechten, photographer. Carl Van Vechten Collection, Library of Congress. Portrait of James Weldon Johnson Carl Van Vechten, photographer. Carl Van Vechten Collection, Library of Congress.

6 Portrait of George S. Schuyler Carl Van Vechten, photographer. Carl Van Vechten Collection, Library of Congress. Bibliography Baker, Houston A. Jr., Modernism and the Harlem Renaissance (Univ. of Chicago Press 1987). Bernard, Emily, Carl Van Vechten and the Harlem Renaissance: A Portrait In Black and White (Yale Univ. Press 2012). Favor, Martin J., Authentic Blackness: The Folk in the New Negro Renaissance (Duke Univ. Press 1999). Feith, Michel; Genevieve, Fabre, eds., Temples for Tomorrow: Looking Back at the Harlem Renaissance (Ind. Univ. Press 2001). Floyd, Samuel, A. Jr., ed., Black Music in the Harlem Renaissance: A Collection of Essays (Greenwood Press 1990). Huggins, Nathan Irvin, Harlem Renaissance, new ed. (Oxford 2007). Lewis, David Levering, When Harlem Was in Vogue (1981; Penguin 1997). Schwarz, A. B. Christa, Gay Voices of the Harlem Renaissance (Ind. Univ. Press 2003). Smith, Katharine Capshaw, Children's Literature of the Harlem Renaissance (Ind. Univ. Press 2006). Spencer, Jon Michael, The New Negroes and Their Music: The Success of the Harlem Renaissance (Univ. of Tenn. Press 1997). Tarver, Australia; Paula C. Barnes, eds., New Voices on the Harlem Renaissance: Essays on Race, Gender, and Literary Discourse (Fairleigh Dickinson Univ. Press 2006). Vogel, Shane, The Scene of Harlem Cabaret: Race, Sexuality, Performance (Univ. of Chicago 2009). Wall, Cheryl, Women of the Harlem Renaissance (Ind. Univ. Press 1995). Wilson, James F., Bulldaggers, Pansies, and Chocolate Babies: Performance, Race, and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance (Univ. of Mich. Press 2010). Wintz, Cary, Black Culture and the Harlem Renaissance (Rice Univ. Press 1988). Wintz, Cary D.; Bruce, A. Glasrud The Harlem Renaissance in the American West: The New Negro's

7 Western Experience (Routledge 2011). Barbara Ryan Copyright 2016 The American Studies Association

8 APA Ryan, B. (2016). Harlem Renaissance. In S. Bronner (Ed.), Encyclopedia of American studies. MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. Retrieved from Chicago Ryan, Barbara. "Harlem Renaissance." In Encyclopedia of American Studies, edited by Simon Bronner. Johns Hopkins University Press, Harvard Ryan, B. (2016). Harlem Renaissance. In S. Bronner (Ed.), Encyclopedia of American studies. [Online]. Johns Hopkins University Press. Available from: [Accessed 19 February 2018]. MLA Ryan, Barbara. "Harlem Renaissance." Encyclopedia of American Studies, edited by Simon Bronner, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1st edition, Credo Reference, Accessed 19 Feb 2018.

How the Harlem Renaissance Started

How the Harlem Renaissance Started How the Harlem Renaissance Started The main factors contributing to the development of the Harlem Renaissance were African-American urban migration, trends toward experimentation throughout the country

More information

Afro-American literature in the wake of the Civil Rights movement

Afro-American literature in the wake of the Civil Rights movement Afro-American literature in the wake of the Civil Rights movement The bland of American democracy displayed a rotten truth: the plight of the American Negro (Hugh Brogan, The Penguin History of United

More information

The Harlem Renaissance, a Symbolic or Literal Movement. the 1920 s. Novels, poems, ideas, political movements, music, dance, and drama steeped

The Harlem Renaissance, a Symbolic or Literal Movement. the 1920 s. Novels, poems, ideas, political movements, music, dance, and drama steeped Ready 1 Jessica Ready Dr. Morales ENG 295 December 15, 2008 The Harlem Renaissance, a Symbolic or Literal Movement The Harlem Renaissance was a cultural awakening for the African Americans in the 1920

More information

Through the Lens: Photography During the Harlem Renaissance

Through the Lens: Photography During the Harlem Renaissance Through the Lens: Photography During the Harlem Renaissance Photography played an important role in capturing the New Negro during the Harlem Renaissance. As with painting, photography documented African

More information

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY CANTON, NEW YORK COURSE OUTLINE ENGLISH 225 AFRICAN-AMERICAN LITERATURE

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY CANTON, NEW YORK COURSE OUTLINE ENGLISH 225 AFRICAN-AMERICAN LITERATURE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK COLLEGE OF TECHNOLOGY CANTON, NEW YORK COURSE OUTLINE ENGLISH 225 AFRICAN-AMERICAN LITERATURE Prepared By: Nadine N. Jennings, PhD Updated By: Emily Hamilton-Honey and Melissa

More information

Objective What impact did the Harlem Renaissance have on American society in the 1920s and today?

Objective What impact did the Harlem Renaissance have on American society in the 1920s and today? Objective What impact did the Harlem Renaissance have on American society in the 1920s and today? Quick Write What does music, literature, art, dance, poetry, and/or theater mean to you in your life? What

More information

Rediscovering a Jazz-Age Modernist

Rediscovering a Jazz-Age Modernist About Store Contact Rediscovering a Jazz-Age Modernist by Allison Meier on March 3, 2014 Archibald J. Motley Jr., Blues 1929. Oil on canvas, 36 x 42 inches (Collection of Mara Motley, MD, and Valerie Gerrard

More information

Contains Substantial Writing Component. Cross-listed with AFR 374

Contains Substantial Writing Component. Cross-listed with AFR 374 Dr. Helena Woodard, Associate Professor E376R, 35025; Afr 374 1, 35540; African American Literature Through the Harlem Renaissance-W; 10:00-11:00 a.m. Par 304 Office: 331 Parlin; Office Hours: 11:00-12:00

More information

AFRICAN DIASPORA LITERATURE SYLLABUS

AFRICAN DIASPORA LITERATURE SYLLABUS AFRICAN DIASPORA LITERATURE SYLLABUS English 2400/Black Studies Theorizing Africana Literature Professor Dr. Clenora Hudson-Weems, Professor of English Class: Tuesdays and Thursdays-12:30-1:45 Phone: 573/882-2783

More information

SYLLABUS. Course Description Rationale, Goals and Objectives:

SYLLABUS. Course Description Rationale, Goals and Objectives: SYLLABUS English 2400/Black Studies Theorizing Africana Literature Professor Dr. Clenora Hudson-Weems, Professor of English Class: Tuesdays and Thursdays-12:30-1:45 Phone: 573/882-2783 (o); 573.777.7754

More information

Describe how cultures have developed and changed. Describe how individuals and groups have contributed to the development of cultures.

Describe how cultures have developed and changed. Describe how individuals and groups have contributed to the development of cultures. Lesson 26 History of the Harlem Renaissance Museum Connection: Art and Intellect Purpose: In this lesson students will be introduced to the Harlem Renaissance. They will read about this historical period,

More information

SWBAT: Describe how the literature of the Harlem Renaissance reflected the African American experience in the 1920s

SWBAT: Describe how the literature of the Harlem Renaissance reflected the African American experience in the 1920s SWBAT: Describe how the literature of the Harlem Renaissance reflected the African American experience in the 1920s Do Now: a) View the Video: The Harlem Renaissance and answer the five discussion questions.

More information

express engage evaluate exhibit

express engage evaluate exhibit High School READ! Modules express engage evaluate exhibit MODULE 1: The A Train to Harlem Table of Contents ABOUT THIS MODULE 3 ACADEMIC VOCABULARY 4 REQUIRED MATERIALS 5 EVENT PLANNER 6 MONDAY: UNSUNG:

More information

Sung by Thomas J. Marshall at Edwards, Mississippi, Recorded by Herbert Halpert. Transcript and Notes

Sung by Thomas J. Marshall at Edwards, Mississippi, Recorded by Herbert Halpert. Transcript and Notes Part I- Musicians Slave Songs: Trouble So Hard 1 The Harlem Renaissance Mini Group Project List of Musicians, Authors, Artists & Activists Sung by Dock and Henry Reed and Vera Hall at Livingston, Alabama,

More information

The Johnson Brothers. James Robinson, MA, CSP AAFSA Historian

The Johnson Brothers. James Robinson, MA, CSP AAFSA Historian The Johnson Brothers James Robinson, MA, CSP AAFSA Historian No, not these guys James and Rosamond Johnson James Weldon Johnson born June 17, 1871 John Rosamond Johnson born August 11, 1873 Both born in

More information

Black Women Poets Of Harlem Renaissance [Paperback] By Emmanuel E. Egar READ ONLINE

Black Women Poets Of Harlem Renaissance [Paperback] By Emmanuel E. Egar READ ONLINE Black Women Poets Of Harlem Renaissance [Paperback] By Emmanuel E. Egar READ ONLINE Visit Amazon.co.uk's Emmanuel Edame Egar Page and shop for all Emmanuel Edame Egar books. Check out pictures, bibliography,

More information

Fall/Winter

Fall/Winter AP/EN 2231 6.0A Couse Director: Delivery Format: Fall/Winter 2014-2015 African American Literature Vermonja Alston valston@yorku.ca Seminar Time: T 2:30-5:30 Description: Short Description The course provides

More information

The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s

The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s The Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s The Harlem Renaissance was a flowering of African American social thought which was expressed through Paintings Music Dance Theater Literature Where is Harlem? The island

More information

Africology and African American Studies (AAAS)

Africology and African American Studies (AAAS) Africology and African American Studies (AAAS) 1 Africology and African American Studies (AAAS) Courses AAAS 5010. Special Topics in African Languages. 3 Credit Hours. Languages vary by semester. Please

More information

Folklorist of the Brush and Palette : Rare Winold Reiss Exhibition Features Distinct, Illuminating Portraits of Harlem Figures

Folklorist of the Brush and Palette : Rare Winold Reiss Exhibition Features Distinct, Illuminating Portraits of Harlem Figures Folklorist of the Brush and Palette : Rare Winold Reiss Exhibition Features Distinct, Illuminating Portraits of Harlem Figures by Victoria L. Valentine on May 3, 2018 8:58 am WINOLD REISS, Harlem Girl

More information

DONALD M. SHAFFER JR., PH.D 102 John Wesley Rd. Starkville, MS

DONALD M. SHAFFER JR., PH.D 102 John Wesley Rd. Starkville, MS DONALD M. SHAFFER JR., PH.D 102 John Wesley Rd. Starkville, MS 39759 ds649@msstate.edu Education Ph.D. English, University of Chicago, 2005 M.A. English, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1997 B.A. English,

More information

The University of Jordan

The University of Jordan The University of Jordan Faculty of Foreign Languages Department of English Postgraduate Program: PhD in English Literature & Criticism Prepared by: Dr. Tahrir Hamdi We bear witness here to a protracted

More information

Curriculum Catalog

Curriculum Catalog 2017-2018 Curriculum Catalog 2017 Glynlyon, Inc. Table of Contents AMERICAN LITERATURE COURSE OVERVIEW...1 UNIT 1: EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE 1600-1800... 1 UNIT 2: THE ROMANTIC PERIOD 1800-1855... 1 UNIT

More information

Rethinking social realism: African American art and literature,

Rethinking social realism: African American art and literature, University of Massachusetts Amherst From the SelectedWorks of James E. Smethurst Fall 2006 Rethinking social realism: African American art and literature, 1930-1953. James E. Smethurst, University of Massachusetts

More information

LESSON TWO: Modern Movements

LESSON TWO: Modern Movements LESSON TWO: Modern Movements 12 IMAGE FIVE: Gustav Klucis. Latvian, 1895 1944. The Development of Transportation, The Five-Year Plan. 1929. Gravure, 28 7 8 x 19 7 8" (73.3 x 50.5 cm). Purchase Fund, Jan

More information

SYLLABUS. Course Description, Rationale, Goals and Objectives:

SYLLABUS. Course Description, Rationale, Goals and Objectives: 1 SYLLABUS English 4420/Black Studies Contemporary Africana Womanist Writers Class: Tuesdays/Thursdays, 11:00-12:15 Instructor: Dr. Clenora Hudson-Weems, Professor of English Phone: (573) 882-2783 (o);

More information

10A. Chapter 1 Section1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

10A. Chapter 1 Section1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance 10A Chapter 1 Section1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance The Renaissance Renaissance is the period of time in which a movemnet caused an explosion of creativity in art and writing Renaissance means

More information

Revised East Carolina University General Education Program

Revised East Carolina University General Education Program Faculty Senate Resolution #17-45 Approved by the Faculty Senate: April 18, 2017 Approved by the Chancellor: May 22, 2017 Revised East Carolina University General Education Program Replace the current policy,

More information

Data Subject Code American literature II: from the 19th to the 21st centuries. Study (s) Degree Center Acad. Period

Data Subject Code American literature II: from the 19th to the 21st centuries. Study (s) Degree Center Acad. Period COURSE DATA Data Subject Code 35342 Name American literature II: from the 19th to the 21st Cycle Grade ECTS Credits 12.0 Academic year 2018-2019 Study (s) Degree Center Acad. Period year 1000 - G.Estudios

More information

The Art and Life of William H. Johnson Brinille E. Ellis. Johannes Larsen Museum Kerteminde, Denmark September 26, 2014

The Art and Life of William H. Johnson Brinille E. Ellis. Johannes Larsen Museum Kerteminde, Denmark September 26, 2014 The Art and Life of William H. Johnson Brinille E. Ellis Johannes Larsen Museum Kerteminde, Denmark September 26, 2014 What is African American Visual Art? A broad term describing the visual arts created

More information

American Scene Painting

American Scene Painting American Scene Painting Harlem Renaissance The Changing American Scene isolation Rebellion and Social Issues 1 American Art Forms _ Harlem Renaissance In his 1925 essay, "The New Negro", Howard University

More information

3. What are some of the factors that seem important for pulling Kubo into the otaku group?

3. What are some of the factors that seem important for pulling Kubo into the otaku group? 21G.039 Japanese Popular Culture Prof. Condry Questions for "Otaku Video" (Otaku no video) Kinsella translates "otaku" as "nerd," but a better interpretation might be as "an obsessed fan." This film is

More information

Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance

Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance Ch. 1-1 Italy: Birthplace of the Renaissance Essential Question: Why did the Renaissance start in Italy? Italy s Advantage Classical and Worldly Values The Renaissance Revolutionizes Art Renaissance Writers

More information

What Was the Renaissance?

What Was the Renaissance? THE RENAISSANCE What Was the Renaissance? It was a change in thinking about the world and the place people occupy in it A new philosophy called HUMANISM came to dominate people s thinking Humanism emphasizes

More information

Edgewood College General Education Curriculum Goals

Edgewood College General Education Curriculum Goals (Approved by Faculty Association February 5, 008; Amended by Faculty Association on April 7, Sept. 1, Oct. 6, 009) COR In the Dominican tradition, relationship is at the heart of study, reflection, and

More information

Charles Dickens WRITING

Charles Dickens WRITING Charles Dickens WRITING Content Charles Dickens is one of the most famous English writers in history. His stories were also works of social commentary, and Dickens is considered to be one of the most influential

More information

SPRING 2018 W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies

SPRING 2018 W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies SPRING 2018 W.E.B. Du Bois Department of Afro-American Studies Art by Nelson Stevens Undergraduate & Graduate Course Description Guide UNDERGRADUATE COURSE OFFERINGS AFROAM 101. Introduction to Black Studies,

More information

Early Twentieth-Century Fiction e20fic17.blogs.rutgers.edu

Early Twentieth-Century Fiction e20fic17.blogs.rutgers.edu Early Twentieth-Century Fiction e20fic17.blogs.rutgers.edu Prof. Andrew Goldstone (andrew.goldstone@rutgers.edu) Mondays: Scott 119; Wednesdays: Scott 106 Office hours: Murray 019, Mondays 1:00 2:30 or

More information

TEACHER RESOURCE PACKET Grade Level: 4th Grade

TEACHER RESOURCE PACKET Grade Level: 4th Grade TEACHER RESOURCE PACKET A lesson about Romare Bearden, the Harlem Renaissance, and the Great Migration. Bloom where you are transplanted: Most artists take some place and like a flower they sink their

More information

Honors Program Course Descriptions Fall Colloquia

Honors Program Course Descriptions Fall Colloquia Honors Program Course Descriptions Fall 2018 Important notes to consider when registering for courses: Honors Colloquia = Only HNRS 300 level courses satisfies the colloquium/colloquia graduation requirement.

More information

Topic Page: Benton, Thomas Hart,

Topic Page: Benton, Thomas Hart, Topic Page: Benton, Thomas Hart, 1782-1858 Definition: Benton, Thomas Hart from The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide US political leader. He was a member of the US Senate

More information

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO ENGLISH DEPARTMENT PHD COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION READING LIST AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE

UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO ENGLISH DEPARTMENT PHD COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION READING LIST AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE UNIVERSITY OF NEW MEXICO ENGLISH DEPARTMENT PHD COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION READING LIST AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE This list should be regarded as suggestive rather than definitive. Students, in consultation

More information

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject

UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE INTERNATIONAL EXAMINATIONS Cambridge International Level 3 Pre-U Certificate Principal Subject ART HISTORY 9799/03 Paper 3 Thematic Topics May/June 2010 2 hours 15 minutes * 361

More information

SOUTH CAROLINA HALL OF FAME

SOUTH CAROLINA HALL OF FAME SOUTH CAROLINA HALL OF FAME Correlation with South Carolina Standards South Carolina Social Studies Standards Early 20 th Century-The Twenties, The Depression Topics include Converse College, Teacher,

More information

Contemporary Black Men's Fiction And Drama

Contemporary Black Men's Fiction And Drama Contemporary Black Men's Fiction And Drama If looking for a book Contemporary Black Men's Fiction and Drama in pdf format, then you've come to the loyal website. We presented utter variation of this book

More information

Section 1. Objectives

Section 1. Objectives Objectives Describe the characteristics of the Renaissance and understand why it began in Italy. Identify Renaissance artists and explain how new ideas affected the arts of the period. Understand how writers

More information

Prof. Dr. Gertraud Koch Open cultural data observations from the perspective of digital anthropology

Prof. Dr. Gertraud Koch Open cultural data observations from the perspective of digital anthropology SHARING IS CARING HAMBURG EXTENSION Hamburg 20./21. April 2016; Museum für Kunst & Gewerbe Hamburg, Universität Hamburg; http://sharecare.nu/hamburg-2017/ Presentation at the Opening Event Prof. Dr. Gertraud

More information

Literary Eras and Important Works : Colonial Period William Bradford John Winthrop Cotton Mather Benjamin Franklin Anne Bradstreet

Literary Eras and Important Works : Colonial Period William Bradford John Winthrop Cotton Mather Benjamin Franklin Anne Bradstreet Literary Eras and Important Works 1607-1775: Colonial Period William Bradford John Winthrop Cotton Mather Benjamin Franklin Anne Bradstreet 1765-1790: Revolutionary Age Thomas Jefferson Alexander Hamilton

More information

Unit Plan: 11 th Grade US History

Unit Plan: 11 th Grade US History Unit Plan: 11 th Grade US History Unit #3: The Roaring Twenties 14 Instructional Days Unit Overview Big Idea: After WW1 America enters a period of economic growth and isolationism which leads to excess

More information

FALL 2018 COURSE DISTRIBUTIONS 2018 English Major Requirements

FALL 2018 COURSE DISTRIBUTIONS 2018 English Major Requirements Element 2: Historical Studies Beginning, Medieval, and Early Modern Periods 201 Inventing Western Literature: Ancient and Medieval Traditions 206 Shakespeare 262 Introduction to the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament

More information

LORD BYRON WHO WAS HE

LORD BYRON WHO WAS HE LORD BYRON WHO WAS HE George Gordon Byron was born on the 22 nd of January 1788, and died on the 19 th of April 1824. He is commonly known simply as Lord Byron, and was an English poet and a leading figure

More information

Art History. Art History - Art History MLitt /9 - August Programme Requirements:

Art History. Art History - Art History MLitt /9 - August Programme Requirements: Art History Programme Requirements: Art History - MLitt AH5100 (30 credits) and 90 credits from Module List: AH5076 - AH5200 and (AH5099 (60 credits) or AH5200 (60 credits)) MPhil: 120 credits from MLitt

More information

SOCIOLOGY. Standard 6 Social Change

SOCIOLOGY. Standard 6 Social Change SOCIOLOGY Students study human social behavior from a group perspective, including recurring patterns of attitudes and actions and how these patterns vary across time, among cultures and in social groups.

More information

And Is My Underwear Like Theirs? : Men s Clothing and the Dynamics of Masculinities in. Kurt Vonnegut s Player Piano

And Is My Underwear Like Theirs? : Men s Clothing and the Dynamics of Masculinities in. Kurt Vonnegut s Player Piano And Is My Underwear Like Theirs? : Men s Clothing and the Dynamics of Masculinities in Kurt Vonnegut s Player Piano Esteban Rojas Castro The objective of this paper is to draw focus to the male characters

More information

100 Memorable Moments in Television 1000 Years of Russian History 150 Years of European History ( ) A World of Choices Abraham Lincoln Acting

100 Memorable Moments in Television 1000 Years of Russian History 150 Years of European History ( ) A World of Choices Abraham Lincoln Acting 100 Memorable Moments in Television 1000 Years of Russian History 150 Years of European History (1789-1939) A World of Choices Abraham Lincoln Acting Workshop All That Jazz Alternative Medicine American

More information

The course provides an introduction to the study of drama and. theatre, including playwriting, directing, acting, design, and technical

The course provides an introduction to the study of drama and. theatre, including playwriting, directing, acting, design, and technical DRA 110 Introduction to Theatre The course provides an introduction to the study of drama and theatre, including playwriting, directing, acting, design, and technical theatre. Historical influences and

More information

ART 1100 A: Intro to the Visual Arts CRN: 22177

ART 1100 A: Intro to the Visual Arts CRN: 22177 O Keeffe vs. Degas 1 ART 1100 A: Intro to the Visual Arts CRN: 22177 Georgia O Keeffe vs. Edgar Degas Tiera Ford Student ID: 870-286-261 April 19, 2011 O Keeffe vs. Degas 2 The purpose of this paper is

More information

Chapter 2: A Historical Sketch of Sociological Theory: The Later Years

Chapter 2: A Historical Sketch of Sociological Theory: The Later Years Test Bank Chapter 2: A Historical Sketch of Sociological Theory: The Later Years Multiple Choice 1. Which of these theorists was an extreme social Darwinist who argued people evolve given their success

More information

Chapter 1 Sections 1 & 2 Pgs /action/yt/watch?videoid=4mgspiaibju

Chapter 1 Sections 1 & 2 Pgs /action/yt/watch?videoid=4mgspiaibju Chapter 1 Sections 1 & 2 Pgs 48-60 http://www.cleanvideosearch.com/media /action/yt/watch?videoid=4mgspiaibju All the world is full of knowing men, of most learned schoolmasters, and vast libraries; and

More information

Spring 2019 COURSE DISTRIBUTIONS 2018 English Major Requirements

Spring 2019 COURSE DISTRIBUTIONS 2018 English Major Requirements Element 2: Historical Studies Beginning, Medieval, and Early Modern Periods 120 Acting Human: Shakespeare and the Drama of Identity 202 Inventing Western Literature: Renaissance to Modern 262 Introduction

More information

DEREE COLLEGE SYLLABUS FOR: HHU 2205 Pygmalion s Creative Dream : Transformations of the Body from Myth to Modernity

DEREE COLLEGE SYLLABUS FOR: HHU 2205 Pygmalion s Creative Dream : Transformations of the Body from Myth to Modernity DEREE COLLEGE SYLLABUS FOR: HHU 2205 Pygmalion s Creative Dream : Transformations of the Body from Myth to Modernity Honors Seminar (New course) US credit: 3/03 Spring 2013 PREREQUISITES: WP 1010 Introduction

More information

How Do I Choose My Category?

How Do I Choose My Category? How Do I Choose My Category? Do you have special interests or talents that lend themselves to a specific category? How can your material best be expressed? Answering the following questions may help you

More information

Modernist Women Writers

Modernist Women Writers Modernist Women Writers Start date 25 th May 2018 End date 27 th May 2018 Venue Madingley Hall Madingley Cambridge Tutor Dr Jenny Bavidge Course code 1718NRX058 Director of Programmes For further information

More information

1. Bonestell, Chelsey. Rocket Blitz from the Moon. Collier s Magazine 23 Oct

1. Bonestell, Chelsey. Rocket Blitz from the Moon. Collier s Magazine 23 Oct James Caputo May 13, 2003 PWR 3 Section 5 Dr. Alyssa O Brien Visually Annotated Bibliography From Sputnik to Mir: American Images of the U.S.-Soviet Space Race and Their Legacies Primary Sources: 1. Bonestell,

More information

Modern World History Grade 10 - Learner Objectives BOE approved

Modern World History Grade 10 - Learner Objectives BOE approved Modern World History Grade 10 - Learner Objectives BOE approved 6-15-2017 Learner Objective: Students will be able to independently use their learning to develop the ability to make informed decisions

More information

The New York Public Library Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division

The New York Public Library Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division The New York Public Library Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division 1967-1973 Sc MG 28 A. Aleins, August 1977 Summary Creator: Katz, Jonathan, 1938-

More information

The following is terminology for graphic novels. Be sure to use this terminology as you analyze the text.

The following is terminology for graphic novels. Be sure to use this terminology as you analyze the text. College Composition and Literature: Summer Reading What is power? Who has power and how does one get and hold onto it? The senior English curriculum will focus on the dynamics of power. The summer reading

More information

Canadian Clay & Glass Gallery. Strategic Plan

Canadian Clay & Glass Gallery. Strategic Plan Canadian Clay & Glass Gallery Strategic Plan 2018-2021 Table of Contents ORGANIZATIONAL PROFILE - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

More information

Leslie King-Hammond T HE DAVID C. DRISKELL SERIES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN ART: VOLUME VIII

Leslie King-Hammond T HE DAVID C. DRISKELL SERIES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN ART: VOLUME VIII Leslie King-Hammond T HE DAVID C. DRISKELL SERIES OF AFRICAN AMERICAN ART: VOLUME VIII Plate 52. Temptation, 1991. Oil on canvas, 48 x 36 in. Collection of Melanie Lawson and John Guess. Courtesy June

More information

TERRA Teacher Lab. Lesson Plan. Title of Lesson: Identity. Topic or Theme of Unit that Lesson is Part of: Who Am I?

TERRA Teacher Lab. Lesson Plan. Title of Lesson: Identity. Topic or Theme of Unit that Lesson is Part of: Who Am I? TERRA Teacher Lab Name: Loza, Martha Ivette, Labombard, Kathryn Stauter, Jeffrey School: Little Village Academy Lesson Plan th Grade(s): 7 /8 th Title of Lesson: Identity Topic or Theme of Unit that Lesson

More information

Terms, People, and Places

Terms, People, and Places Terms, People, and Places Renaissance: Medici: Perspective: Renaissance Man Niccolo Machiavelli: The Prince Humanism: Humanities: Johann Gutenberg: The Printing Press: Lesson Objectives: Describe the characteristics

More information

ENGLISH 578 Modern American Fiction Bob Lamb Fall Office: Heavilon 435

ENGLISH 578 Modern American Fiction Bob Lamb Fall Office: Heavilon 435 ENGLISH 578 Modern American Fiction Bob Lamb Fall 2008 1900-1940 Office: Heavilon 435 Heavilon Hall 126 Office Hours: after class T /Th 4:30-6:00 Home Phone: 497-1749 bronxangrybear@aol.com The following

More information

OXNARD COLLEGE ACADEMIC SENATE

OXNARD COLLEGE ACADEMIC SENATE OXNARD COLLEGE ACADEMIC SENATE Our College Mission Oxnard College is a learning-centered institution that embraces academic excellence by providing multiple pathways to student success. MEETING AGENDA

More information

Faith Ringgold Paints Crown Heights

Faith Ringgold Paints Crown Heights Faith Ringgold Paints Crown Heights Time: 15 minutes INTRODUCTION Study Guide Faith Ringgold Paints Crown Heights is a film about an important work by the famous African-American woman artist that sends

More information

Gifted and Talented AIM Learning Outcomes Framework

Gifted and Talented AIM Learning Outcomes Framework Gifted and Talented AIM Learning Outcomes Framework Grade: Sixth Nine Weeks: 2nd Subject: 1920s Big Ideas: (Topics/Concepts): Cultural and Technological Impacts on Society Enduring Understanding (What

More information

CELEBRATES WHAT QUALITIES MAKE A ROLE MODEL? hardworking. a leader. respects others. inspiring

CELEBRATES WHAT QUALITIES MAKE A ROLE MODEL? hardworking. a leader. respects others. inspiring Barbie celebrates all role models, big and small, that inspire girls to dream big. Learn how you can be a role model, or thank a role model in your life! WHAT QUALITIES MAKE A ROLE MODEL? positive attitude

More information

Lesson Title: Visualizing City Life: Artists William Johnson and Jacob Lawrence

Lesson Title: Visualizing City Life: Artists William Johnson and Jacob Lawrence Lesson 28 Museum Connection: Art and Intellect Lesson Title: Visualizing City Life: Artists William Johnson and Jacob Lawrence Purpose: In this lesson students will examine the artistic and social factors

More information

MONROE TOWNSHIP PUBLIC SCHOOLS CURRICULUM MAP. Grades 9-12 Introduction to Art (3 Days a Week)

MONROE TOWNSHIP PUBLIC SCHOOLS CURRICULUM MAP. Grades 9-12 Introduction to Art (3 Days a Week) MONROE TOWNSHIP PUBLIC SCHOOLS CURRICULUM MAP Grades 9-12 Introduction to Art (3 Days a Week) 2009 2010 Arts Education in the 21 st Century New Jersey Core Curriculum Content Standards for Visual and Performing

More information

1.1 The Renaissance: a rebirth or revival of art and learning ( )

1.1 The Renaissance: a rebirth or revival of art and learning ( ) 1.1 The Renaissance: a rebirth or revival of art and learning (1300-1600) After suffering through wars, destruction, and the plague of the Middle Ages, people wanted to celebrate life and the human spirit.

More information

Program Level Learning Outcomes for the Department of International Studies Page 1

Program Level Learning Outcomes for the Department of International Studies Page 1 Page 1 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES Honours Major, International Relations By the end of the Honours International Relations program, a successful student will be able to: I. Depth and Breadth of Knowledge A.

More information

Northern Renaissance

Northern Renaissance Northern Renaissance Northern Renaissance Objective: Explain the causes and effects of the Northern Renaissance and its impact upon history. Identify major literary and artistic figures, and explain the

More information

Art Terminology. The Contemporary Framework

Art Terminology. The Contemporary Framework Art Terminology The Contemporary Framework The Contemporary Framework Contemporary Framework The Contemporary Framework is used to examine an artwork, irrespective of when it was created, in the context

More information

SPENCER MUSEUM of ART

SPENCER MUSEUM of ART BLACK HISTORY MONTH TOUR SPENCER MUSEUM of ART Learn about artworks by celebrated African American artists, global works from Africa, and works exploring social justice. Use this guide for our 4th-floor

More information

Art During the Protestant Reformation. Marshall High School Western Civilization II Mr. Cline Unit Two NA

Art During the Protestant Reformation. Marshall High School Western Civilization II Mr. Cline Unit Two NA Art During the Protestant Reformation Marshall High School Western Civilization II Mr. Cline Unit Two NA Durer's Self-Portrait Take a look at this picture. Who do you see? If you said Jesus, you're wrong...but

More information

PUBLIC RELATIONS PRCM EFFECTIVE FALL 2016

PUBLIC RELATIONS PRCM EFFECTIVE FALL 2016 PUBLIC RELATIONS PRCM EFFECTIVE FALL 2016 GROUP 1 COURSES (6 hrs) Select TWO of the specialized writing courses listed below JRNL 2210 NEWSWRITING (3) LEC. 3. Pr. JRNL 1100 or JRNL 1AA0. With a minimum

More information

CRITERIA FOR AREAS OF GENERAL EDUCATION. The areas of general education for the degree Associate in Arts are:

CRITERIA FOR AREAS OF GENERAL EDUCATION. The areas of general education for the degree Associate in Arts are: CRITERIA FOR AREAS OF GENERAL EDUCATION The areas of general education for the degree Associate in Arts are: Language and Rationality English Composition Writing and Critical Thinking Communications and

More information

Art And Womanhood In Fin-de-Siecle Writing: The Fiction Of Lucas Malet, (Gender And Genre) By Catherine Delyfer

Art And Womanhood In Fin-de-Siecle Writing: The Fiction Of Lucas Malet, (Gender And Genre) By Catherine Delyfer Art And Womanhood In Fin-de-Siecle Writing: The Fiction Of Lucas Malet, 1880-1931 (Gender And Genre) By Catherine Delyfer If looking for the book by Catherine Delyfer Art and Womanhood in Fin-de-Siecle

More information

Transition materials for A Level History

Transition materials for A Level History Transition materials for A Level History Introduction Welcome to the A Level History pack preparing you to start your A level History course. This pack contains a step by step programme of activities and

More information

19 TH CENTURY U.S. HISTORY TOPIC: GILDED AGE/PROGRESSIVE ERA HIST 457/557 WINTER 2017 MW, 2:00-3:20

19 TH CENTURY U.S. HISTORY TOPIC: GILDED AGE/PROGRESSIVE ERA HIST 457/557 WINTER 2017 MW, 2:00-3:20 19 TH CENTURY U.S. HISTORY TOPIC: GILDED AGE/PROGRESSIVE ERA HIST 457/557 WINTER 2017 MW, 2:00-3:20 Professor Jeff Ostler 385 McKenzie Hall Office Hours: TR, 12:00-1:00 F, 2:30-3:30 and by appointment

More information

Black History Month VOCABULARY ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS. African American Artists

Black History Month VOCABULARY ESSENTIAL QUESTIONS. African American Artists VISUAL ARTISTS VOCABULARY expressionism, narrative, collage, migration, Jim Crow laws, graffiti, antebellum, silhouette, racial identity, gender issues, elements of art, principles of art: balance, rhythm,

More information

Wolmer s Boys School 6B CAPE Literatures in English Course Outline Unit Topic: Prose Primary Text: Hard Times Teacher: Miss C.

Wolmer s Boys School 6B CAPE Literatures in English Course Outline Unit Topic: Prose Primary Text: Hard Times Teacher: Miss C. Wolmer s Boys School 6B CAPE Literatures in English Course Outline Unit Topic: Prose Primary Text: Hard Times Teacher: Miss C. McCleary RATIONALE: Literature contains most of the available knowledge about

More information

This class will be partially online, and partially physical. See day by day schedule below.

This class will be partially online, and partially physical. See day by day schedule below. ADVANCED FICTION (486 001) Wednesday 5:30--8:00 Simpkins 308. Professor Erika Wurth (et-wurth@wiu.edu) The texts for this course are: On Writing Fiction (David Jauss), How to Kill Yourself and Others in

More information

Literature and Cultural Theory Preliminary Exam Texts. Major Fields of Literature and Culture African American Literature

Literature and Cultural Theory Preliminary Exam Texts. Major Fields of Literature and Culture African American Literature College of Letters and Science Department of English Curtin Hall P.O. Box 413 Milwaukee, WI 53201-0413 414.229.4511 phone 414.229.2643 fax www.uwm.edu/dept/english/ Literature and Cultural Theory Preliminary

More information

Judith Campanaro Art educator, art therapist, and author

Judith Campanaro Art educator, art therapist, and author Judith Campanaro Art educator, art therapist, and author Y11 ADVANCED: CREATING IN COLOR The project in this lesson (inspired by the life and work of Romare Bearden) provides you with an opportunity for

More information

DECONSTRUCTING RAP Experimental College / EXP F Tuesdays, 6:00 8:30

DECONSTRUCTING RAP Experimental College / EXP F Tuesdays, 6:00 8:30 INSTRUCTOR: Dr. Andrew Shryock CONTACT: andrew.shryock@gmail.com DECONSTRUCTING RAP Experimental College / EXP - 0013 - F Tuesdays, 6:00 8:30 DESCRIPTION: While rap challenges listeners with explicit content

More information

SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL

SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH COUNCIL WHO WE ARE Better understanding makes for better choices. The SSRC is an international, interdisciplinary network of networks dedicated to galvanizing knowledge and mobilizing

More information

The Augustan Age ( )

The Augustan Age ( ) The Augustan Age (1702-1760) The Stuart dynasty ended with the death of Queen Anne, the protestant daughter of James II (1714). The Hanover dynasty began with George I, German and protestant. Severel Jacobite

More information

CULTURE AND POVERTY ALLEVIATION. Hangzhou, May Bonapas Onguglo, Senior Economic Affairs Officer, UNCTAD

CULTURE AND POVERTY ALLEVIATION. Hangzhou, May Bonapas Onguglo, Senior Economic Affairs Officer, UNCTAD CULTURE AND POVERTY ALLEVIATION Hangzhou, May 2013 Bonapas Onguglo, Senior Economic Affairs Officer, UNCTAD Culture is recognized as an essential component of human development and an important contributor

More information

William Holman Hunt and the Pre-Raphaelites: Artistic Aims, Worldview, and Influence on Nineteenth-Century Culture

William Holman Hunt and the Pre-Raphaelites: Artistic Aims, Worldview, and Influence on Nineteenth-Century Culture Western Oregon University Digital Commons@WOU Honors Senior Theses/Projects Student Scholarship 6-1-2016 William Holman Hunt and the Pre-Raphaelites: Artistic Aims, Worldview, and Influence on Nineteenth-Century

More information

ABSTRACT A STUDY OF THE WOMEN CHARACTERS IN THE SELECTED NOVELS OF D. H. LAWRENCE

ABSTRACT A STUDY OF THE WOMEN CHARACTERS IN THE SELECTED NOVELS OF D. H. LAWRENCE ABSTRACT A STUDY OF THE WOMEN CHARACTERS IN THE SELECTED NOVELS OF D. H. LAWRENCE INTRODUCTION D. H. Lawrence was a prolific writer of considerable power. During the nineteen years of his continuous writing,

More information