Harlem Is Everywhere: The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism

How did the literature of the Harlem Renaissance play a central role in conversations around Black identity in America and abroad? In this episode we’ll learn about publications like Opportunity, The Crisis, and Fire!! which each promoted a unique political and aesthetic perspective on Black life at the time. We’ll learn about Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston before they became household names and explore how collaboration and conversation between artists, writers, and scholars came to define the legacy of the Harlem Renaissance.

Learn more about the exhibition at metmuseum.org/HarlemRenaissance

Objects featured in this episode:

Laura Wheeler Waring’s covers of The Crisis, September 1924 and April 1923

Winold Reiss, Cover of Opportunity: Journal of Negro Life, February 1925

Winold Reiss, Langston Hughes, 1925

Aaron Douglas, Miss Zora Neale Hurston, 1926

Guests:

Monica L. Miller, Ann Whitney Olin Professor of English and Africana Studies, Barnard College, Columbia University

John Keene, poet and novelist

For a transcript of this episode and more information, visit metmuseum.org/HarlemIsEverywhere

#HarlemIsEverywhere

Harlem Is Everywhere is produced by The Metropolitan Museum of Art in collaboration with Audacy's Pineapple Street Studios.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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