harlem other (2) - Soka University Repository
Transcription
harlem other (2) - Soka University Repository
THE EVE OF HARLEM THE : OTHER RENAISSANCE WRITERS (2) Hisao I. The Climbers: a Story of Sun-kissed KISHIMOTO Sweetheart by Yorke Jones (1912)1) In 1912 Yorke Jones wrote The. Climbers, a novel concerned black culture and education. is the narrator; The characters with are Joseph Wade, who Augustus Fairfax, the hero, David J. Holt and Robert Wilson. After graduation from Norwalk college, they go their separate ways: Wade becomes a doctor in the South: Fairfax becomes a teacher; and Wilson and Holt become ministers in the North. Later, when Holt holds the position of the president State Normal college, Farifax, Wilson, work together as college staff. Fairfax and Julia get engaged. An old photograph of Rockford and Holt's daughter, sent Julia, fall in love and to Fairfax as a marriage present reveals the hitherto unknown drunk, is Fairfax's father. As a. result, truth that Jester, the town the black middle class Holt family objects to the marriage. leaves the town mistakenly thinking conveyed Fairfax Julia does not love him, but later, to him. The story Lulia's true feelings are ends with their marriage 59 ----- ceremony. ----- Yorke Jones introduces My risibles and was name. Augustus tall and thin—even he as a blooded brought North ... he became was new not so light the black future racer ... he was the future hearted light man bright, hearted because is hopeful parents; in his studies .. . ... to be very Because he present was butt of fun. they (because hopeful; though They, too, are thought seem aumsing; his present because, but while is new and yet it is a grave mistake Jones' characterization had of blacks of Fairfax at . that to imagine his that to his brother in this novel "lacks the restraint an Ex-Colored of industrial ... Man. education. the State's Negro's to State The author right. is the very stereotype time and this passage, novel as a whole, is flawed by repetition. right of slave he seems amusing.2) whites the restless comical .... child of Ham feels free of care, Regretably, that As nervously was thought Fairfax as he seemed full of promise), white, smooth- born of fun and his appearance He was he had made good progress race are America's to be very Fairfax! because he seemed so amusing and Fairfax's between to gauntness. the college butt light hearted the as follows: were touched by the contrast high-sounding black, which Fairfax Hugh M. Gloster of Johnson's like the has stated The Autobiography Like Booker T. Washington, Jones thinks of highly Mr. Holt insist: education of the Negro The child education that echos Washington's of the wage-earner the capitalist's views on this ----- is not a gratuity, 60 ----- has the child issue and it is same has.4) futhermore, insists that " ... Negroes money white folk's money will ... in such a frenzy about He points equality white South social equality is baseless. this baseless into many, of these expressed toward remarks, of blacks is his black in the works In conclusion, no more want injustices pessimistic for this and of preceding II. The Conquest the medium the people of the the once enslaved is extremely class black this novel is a statement South through betrays socially with with Negroes! in the resolution middle "5) the dread of social to associate Jones of the black middle class and the sufferings the white social intercourse.... fear of social equality in his characterization The reason or rather people want to mingle socially many that people) keep themselves for this: first, "because Negroes people than white In spite Yet they (southern out two reasons Secondly, will buy the same fine things ideals race.") optimistic of the novel. which are also novelists. of the merits wrought and demerits by pressure from of a love story. (1913) and The Forged Note (1915) by Oscar Micheaux Oscar Micheaux(1884-1951) published three novels before the Harlem Renaissance: The conquest: the Story of a Negro Pioneer in 1913, The Forged Note: a Romance of the Darker Races in 1915: The Homesteader in 1917. (In this article there is no commentary about The Homesteader because the book was unavailable.) According to Bruce Kellner's Dictionary for the Era, The Harlem Renaissance; a Historical Oscar Micheaux is introduced as a black pioneer film producer: This son of former slaves began his career as a pullman car porter, but when he saw an advertisement 61 ---- for cheap land on an ---- Indian Reservation, within became intersted five years he had expanded He lost his land in his twenties so he became subject a writer matter. When the Micheaux his film was not accepted; Film Corporation. Lafayette Many Players for example, developed usually dishonesty, using films Company films wanted because The Homesteader, Micheaux of performers, are noteworthy: to his southern to start Paul Robeson black played and None of Micheaux's and bankruptcy investors, stronger student college, members of the on Charles W. Chesnutt's figure, traveling fur coats. caught acclaim arotInd because only to be community; year, largely the thirties of his insistence ---- 62 ---- on light-skinned from wearing big on a shoestring, risks in 1928. with backing the criticism but he must the country He always operated up with his extravagant the following but during returns novel. to movie house in flashy automobiles, hats and full-lenght reorganized a black films had any critical have been an imposing house Tucker. in Body and Soul; and The House Behind the Cedars (1923) was based movie white and Our Gates (1920) is. (1924), a black Harvard by both he had light skinned about lynchi,ng; in Birthright opposed Preer, soon, such as Lorenzo Within all used actors from usually stars to the Micheaux Agnes in The Homesteader—but hometown to film in the beginning—Evely of Hollywood for his proposal he founded followed black audiences. his own stable in emulation his own experiences to sell his books. instead Stock Company played A few of the because of his inlaws' he refused direct filmed for exclusively homestead. Picture The Homesteader and Dakota had a talent Motion and ranching his South for pulps, Lincoln Micheaux's in farming He from white of his work performers grew and depictions Looking of stereotypical at Micheaux's Conquest and Davereaux, behavior.7) careers, The Forged there Note are seem to be no duobt that autobiographical the hero in The Coquest (Devereaux name was Oscar black farmer. Micheaux), Using him the parents throw changes jobs frequently suggests was the bright excuse that out of his home seeking at the saves his wages when part of an Indian obtain of greater in love with Jessie, a railroad, engagement struggles falls and then in the introduction that discontented and the discontent." Although the Black version There politicians. with in a etc. He as a porter, struggles During a Scotch Orlean, is a true circumstances this and to as porter he climbs time he falls who are trying to girl—concealing the daughter of of a negro were the that of the American his Rev. states who was outcome of that it is also happens to be Dream: factions of the negro and Reactionaries. The Progressives, Micheaux story this is "a true story," education He her. "this as Progressives industrial numerous to Booker T. Washington are two distinct be classed Miss divorces This novel was dedicated and tips success. with to Jessie—marries McCraline boy, porter, with the developers in love his he works more money working Overcoming and greater business is put up for sale, he manages After saving to homesteading. the ladder build reservation it for 2500 dollars. he turns from learn his situation: as a shoe shine money the author's age of seventeen. coal mine and in a coal chute, considerable Oscar but lazy son of a rich he must to better novels. The race, who might somewhat like the led by Booker T. Washington as the material 63 ----- idea, and are good, active ----- citizens; while the other class distinctly contend for more equal rights, all very logical, indeed, with any concrete race for the depredations is anti-DuBois Micheaux's second novel, Sydney Wyeth, Sydney and Mildreds novelist, depending aind pro-Booker of selling encounter many One day a strange sickness, and makes he leaves back and confesses In the final stage Mildred last, town. befalls his writer's with sickness she becomes intuition, he can do nothing During Sydney he reads for her and and Mildred the next few months it a success. When But he realizes takes care she takes over he recovers from his love for her, his comes But then she leaves town suddenly. a nun. He waits This love story contains The story starts At first sight Sydney gets information he is able to meet as a love story. to find him. his love to her. has become of The She sets off to search for him selling books, malady of him in the hospital. his business With in her face, however, struggles white T. Washington. o,ne year prior to his strange in his life. but after of the entire sells books by himself. town. on loud demands, books is treated the central leaves for another heir demands The Forged Note, is a continuation books in Cinncinatti. the dark fortune largely which is of a f ew. 9 when he is selling person and protection, given to the condemnation His experience in every way, but they do not substantiate This outlook Conquest. privileges, policies; and are too much reactionary at an ex-slave for her at the market market that and, at her again. some sub-themes, confronting blacks. In Effingham was among the black population. such as the social problems at that time Sydney points 64 80% of all murders out, however, that ----- elite blacks do not And, as he met so little have These Negro ing about the and searching reason lack concrete helps elite, he was surprised condition that of the masses. habit ... In other and they paid Murder, words, as we "They never think noth- of the man's falling: a good observation. "12 which have a marked there are the upon their desire people care discovers the were the of ill training, victims ignorance, he enumerates face child people is facing. dozen roast small play. the the little Crime, It is a distress- A library and hot days children In Effingham, of the and long homes, have or give therefore, in time, parks, little bodies, will, ... large stuffy Black their ... conditions in their alleys. to exercise for Sydney conclusion, During must of which no place "his existing use exclusively. play, problem In state a half people only problem: effect perhaps they time.I") ] was not open to colored ing condition They something, and this was the result of the black proper. to learn sources of civic a fourth trying for the black says: are nigga's having and gaming, for white his books in Effingham for the causes to sell up and This [library mer, more to the reading dressing of liquor problems: "10) who After such seen, was an establised ]Palmer for about the attention worries. Miss worry all sum- perhaps no place to free to is their vent greatest environment.13) Considering hundred the churches situation never Sydney encouraged is resentful the 65 ---- people that to read "more than anything a but the Bible."") He criticizes people for their Strangely, ment. lack of concern who threatens Latham her. comes to know during his business pocketed this belonging the title seems to indicate is actually a romance with peripheral Blood (1915) This is a melodramatic a rich man, identity and then resumes The first scene incurs takes wealthy man named serious wound. he meets father, an ex- to become otherwise, bishop. the by Williams a happy concerns. M. Ashby"' Park of her when a falls off his horse and recieves a beauty and her. They he marries her identity life. Birch by which upon the revelation place in Central Attracted situation to the main story, environmental a catastrophy Stanton his nurse, in New York kindness have of Miss a son and Zelda lead a life. Mr. Birch hires a new chef named Mrs. Birch and knows her secret, exhausted. black. her address. novel about a lady who conceals marries reveal Mildred's to the church note is the incidental happy by a man from a person that the forged Marston, best by blacks. she changes concerning Redder the who know of the theft, forced Mildred to get married Although III. committed situatidn It seems money A rich merchant, him. trips. even girl is foreshadowed he appears about and The Forged Note is a mere supple- a mystery Everytime Sydney preachers, with crime the title of the novel, Mildred minster, teachers, she has black blood. and as a result, Finally, Mr. Birch that Leon becomes Leon, who is an reveals upset He threatens she become mentally to Mr. Birch . that and leaves 66 ----- old friend her to and physically his for Europe. ----- of wife is a One days year later doing Zelda charity work. is unhappy because is playing her visits her. husband's This M. Asbhy two persons nor is still tune states on she as in Europe, evening piano her as Zelda her husband follows: other great spends traveling the — and, love each are where her. One stormy however, law Jersey who forget favorite does say, convention, apart. Mr. Birch, book where in New he cannot William The settles I hope, deeply enough strongly, neither barriers -- that custom, to nor keep them ..16) is clearly the theme of this novel. The in essence ... fundamental idea is that: .... we basis, are the essence, has the same I,n the beginning thinks that Southern when Negro problem, out to her think son Adrian I could mix redder, mine redeer not cannot sort my pure his father by unjust a Negro problem, American with of prejudice are of to-day, blood,—the idealistic. you newer corpuscles 67 ---- the being Mr. Birch it is not problem. his stand. of thing."") hate; one human up a world blood case another.17) he changes build in any are live is revealed but makes make Mrs. Birch "is is not that accuses .ago, and that that is a human, "you You are moved years Mr. identity Love cell, parts problem it husband, as its basis. the one little both the same fundamental Mrs. Birch's you all the She cries He rebukes stock?"24> with think thoughts the of which ... are "Do Their his mother: "My not color her, and sides thoughts "18) But of love with common a of fifty blood hate, is every ---- prejudice, The word in the "Our boy while. It's however, cheapens Lillian later, was God's posed and thought" A year questions IV. respect "newer novel. he says, worth but by the kind or "redder when Love greatest gift novel. The it and makes Simmons for blood" Mr. Birch right. is the others. "211 are the meets simplistic it seem key concepts Mrs. Birch only thing to men. "22) This or the Conflict Otis M. Shackleford again, in the world is the answer solution of the to novel, melodramatic. of Sections (1919) by 23) This is a love story between belle, and Charles Christopher, in the North. feeling Lillian Simmons, a Northern black a Southern black youth who is working One day Charles quarrels with George Simmons, Lill- ian's brother, about blacks. As a result George instigates members of his group to drive Charles out of town with the accusation, "the Southern niggers spoiled our privileges. "24) Lillian, who has been the object of Charles' devotion since they first met, realizes the gravity of the situation and persuades Charles to leave town. After the trouble George resigns from his job with the city and leads an unstable life. Because of George's bad reputation his father also loses his good standing and Lillian cannot even get a job. family fortune steadily The declines. Three years later, after Charles has saved a considerable amount of money, he decides to return to town to start a business. Just as he arrives back in town Lillian is about to go South to teach. Seeing each other only briefly, they have to part. Charles' business is prosterous, his grocery. On the testimony but one night someone sets fire to of a witness, George is arrested 68 ---- on ---- an arson charge. This marks At the end of the story who has mended called Charles between quarrel Charles his ways, prejudice taking and Northern is rapidly or has taken to Lillian and George, together with Charles conflict, stance that is the difference toward blacks. so-styled growing deep root all over in your bad Southern Southern During blacks George expresses this city. "niggers." carry your ideas and prejudices don't need you to teach us any lessons. ... a his anger: country. This and it would have come sooner or later regardless of these relationship. Company. with Charles about Southern ... in their a company of this novel is interracial the Southern point gets married forms and George The subject a turning It is is inevitable of the conduct You had out of this better town. We And any advice to you is to "beat it."25) In answer to George's Your white people that the connot unless Shackelford Charles, Northern people are white racial spoil remarks, maintains of the sections that will assert the as follows: this itself. That between of the novel. George negro negroes, race is aroused.26 quarrel between A Business League has been organized 69 one bad from this friction by the sub-title that than water, of good of the other ongoing lesson, ... blood is thicker of a community resulting indicates that the reconcilation "harmony and progress ,": retorts to learn that in the hearts struggles indicated yet people, privileges the prejudice Lillians' have instinct the Charles George is the conflict Moreover, and Charles with Charles and he leads to Christopher ---- as its president. before And known in Northerners in this and city. business this city harmony among the are ties united and the Southerners They and such progress colored was people. view life through by the ties of friendship, of matrimony. It never the is difficult same glass by ties to break of such a combination.27 He added that ties of matrimony even the if it does invite are furnish employment not to fundamental " . If need both life races the accord worthy to of Booker yours ... There "29) idea of . Negro benefit and the higher This aim. girls or security The They race of in and learning with his the address: civil, the and interests for any of of us except of all. "30) characters hero the commercial, development "separate accords make the race. courses shall main that of thought and enterprise, to the expressed that of the business, insists industrial, a way and Washington's the boys is no defence intelligence of Washington our in characterization with pursue T. with ties a positive them interlacing one the the be ... hightest Even are in the "28? Shackleford but them excel idea riligious in for to to segregation. for strive "converted harmful, inducements and of friendship, are schools are ties seems Charles to is described be in as fol- lows: ... his thoughts had a high aim him on of the On the step by Southern other is characterized hand were in step life; pure that until and his it was he had ideals this completed were lofty; that he aim which had led education in one high his Colleges.31) George, who is handsome as follows: 70 with light brown skin, He also which had an is usually of freedom in evidence colored ceptibly when he spoke . . .32) healthy, vigorous, and training had not piano, playing people. been to be perfect actress are portraying V. in any Theatre. a love It almost produced seems Northern is "a girl Both to the author, whose and and Lillian as if an actor M. Shackleford per- sewing, George between him showed Cooking, friendship by Otis According line. and spirit Lillian "33) about born and high optimistic love and the in a play T. Washington is merely His training neglected person. independence Northern were her accomplishments. appear North and with educated Beautiful, the air and the South at the however, an and Booker this novel story. The American by Henry Cavalryman F. Downing. : a Liberian Romance (1917) 34) Calvert, a wealthy white man living in New York, has two secrets. The first is that he had a daughter twenty year ago. with a native woman in Africa The second is that he has a sister who is a negress. The novel is the story of his sister's son, Paul Dale, and a Liberian girl named Lupelta. Paul is a captain serving the Liberian president. One day he rescues a native girl Lupelta from Chief Lodango and falls in love with her. He educates her and teaches her to be a cultivated lady. On another occasion he helps a young inbunda tribe member, Whreabo, from being abused by hostility. the princess Muffy, With a relative the hand, of the president. president he plots dispatching him 71 This to entrap to a Paul dangerous provokes Muffy's in order to win district. When Lupelta and Lodango kidnaps nessed princess them the scene Paul rescues them Lupelta who also loves Paul, on the informs Chief Mwambo. says Hulda, orders of Muffy. Paul of the news. from the precarious go on Whreabo, After situation. a picnic. who many wit- difficulties with the help of the Just before he rescues them Paul receives a letter that is a white. The last scene is a happy one of the Dales in New York three years later. Princess is actually Hulda is now Paul's Mr. Calvert's daughter wife. It turns out that who has been missing Lupelta for twenty years. According to Hugh Spingarn brothers," National Assoiation E. Spingarn M. Gloster, this that is, Arthur novel B. Spingarn for the advancement (the chairman concerns except resources of Liberia. all his efforts to this concern. People) and Joel the dedication with virtually is no ideological of the agricultural to the Unite States, He makes of the in 1973, which is reprinted the minor one of the development Upon returning to "the (vice-president However, printed This is a romance dedicated of Colored of the board). not found in the AMS Press version from the 1917 edition. was Paul devotes the following statement to his wife: The so-called wish leader, me further; Anyhow, absorbed who now fatten but if I succeded, the the by some European majority country power, on the State, of the doubtless people will be saved and that will from will rejoice. being will be something gained. 35) This statement lacks concrete aspects arid this novel as a whole. ----- 72 ------ is the limitation of the VI. The Immediate Jewel of His Soul (1919) by Herman Dreer36 William Smith is a brilliant, active youth who was the president of a young people's circle and a member of a choir. high school he works on his uncle's plantation he witnesses a lynching become a minister He graduates After graduating in the south. When scene by a white mob there, he decides to to save black people. college, attends a theoligical seminary, and then is ordained to be a minister. The speech he gives at his appointment ceremony arouses antipathy among the clergy present. mark made at the Ministrial Conference worses the situation so he is not even allowed to preach. Moreover, his chances to be become a Another re- lawyer or teacher are also deferred because of his subversive thoughts. Finally, after many long struggles he is permitted to become minister. At a party Reverend Smith sees his old friends. and Susan Lee, who are in love with him. to Susan to whom has been attracted Thelma Haskell Smith confesses his love since high school. The next spring Smith buys a 600-acre farm about 80 miles from Seaton where he builds his home, church, and an experimental farm. The farm is operated by both blacks and whites. Susan, who runs a music school, proposal, but when she visits Smith's with her. Smith's Thelma, is awaiting The ..success of Smith's than Susan, also visits win to his heart. farm is threatening his conversion of many good black Christians of wine dealers. marriage farm he is too busy to talk who is more agressive farm i;n an attempt Smith's to whites. Moreover, arouses the displeasure As a result, there is an increase in the tension bet73 ----- ----- ween whites problem and blacks. she hurries Susan arrives Cocurrent As soon as Thelma to the farm to organize at the farm there is tension with this love triangle situation instigated by the tension Susan faints. When Susan recovers heart She realizes and she leaves Reverend Smith's the farm with ours during to be illegally be found only after have in their French, veins and Germans cans, nothing insists minister. ... of equality Democracy of on the has won the reverend's are expressed at the appoint- fifty years of slavery that the Negro among search ... the and contiiues us is to Many of my brethren proudest blood we were born in America of ... Anglo-Saxon, we are Ameri- he objects to separate schools and of all people: means mixed ask for separate and by character and the collaboration "So much white blood was mixt else. "37} So naturally on the never blacks of patient some re- she finds that everyone in the South, years Reverend to the alone. the two hundred mingling and herself. Smith that Thelma ideas about ment where he is appointed When Succumbing While she is unconscious, sensible of this is in the explosive mob outside. with the help of the mayor farm is cerebrating. Thelma inside the farm white aware for self-defence. between solves the crisis whites. becomes and schools schools. with mixed faculties Let us enter scholarship these show our selves .. let us strongholds the equal of all people.38 He adds that the church's work ledge to all people and preaches is to hasten that We must be JUST like HIM" and that intelligence. brings them the spread "God is no respecter "ignorance together. "39) Moreover, 74 ---- of knowof persons. keeps people apart, he maintains that "poverty is the mother of vice , crime, and most uncleanness. He believs. contrary to the adage that "Money is the root of most evil," that "the lack of money has been the root of most evil ." As the purpose of life, Reverend the Church speech arouses atheistic establishing to realize antipathy to spur others Upon farm returning under of others, of those among about K. K. threatens Reverend streets can I very forcibly was made flesh the The educated man You want Negro never a New South Old things you must whthin 24 says: The tho(sic) later the Uncle as well as I that lyncht commits this we permit but and Old have passed have a New 75 ----- and the K. is the new Negro. has been is the curprit is impossible. a New South, man Eventually circumstances You know not a colored results him to leave town and Rev. Smith is also passing. the quillty combination have the word shown .in the "Birth of Nation," ... of the church yeilds convincing Smith telling This is a new South, where, and and achieve, for white people. who understands last ten years ministry us.41 become a threat for rape. to the is then ever, for not in trying me ... so his activities Tom type, is the who feel there but I can indicate of his speech and action A white This the auspices now is more effective The consistency scoundrel the clergy to get a thoro (sic.) education the attainment hours. man.") he says: to the success and dwelt to every among it. an experimental his ideals, "If we can live the life of Christ, its influence about My preaching point concludes, will extend which something Smith Negro, in the in this state crime any- to loaf in the Negro. away. And The If you I don't ----- bite my tongue to say that Rev. Smith is the kind the South wants . . . .42) This novel is the first to describe Reverend Smith, prince." sion. the new The author's Negro pride comes for me to marry as a "genuine Thelma insists "... and I see the man I want, the I'll make no escape. We'll fight it out if it takes all summer. fighting Smith and a precursor of the strong woman. hundreds published leader who had the gratest T. Washington. by Rabelais the affections on black literature was Booker sprang up almost in the night and entered of black and white ... He emphasized stantly increasing force for us to seek the paramount nation, political dious criticism DuBois kept hammering eco- away with conforce in a freedom.44} DuBois's Although novel, Reverend Reverend Jewel of His Soul the Then novel. Fran- During the early twenty nomic freedom ... Recognizing in Dreer says of him: Booker T. Washington securely O'Hara to protect The Immediate influence will be If I lose, I will of Scarlett in Gargantua She is a angel when Dreer when the time fight of my life to get him : there Gone with the Wind or Abby Thelema cois (? 1495 - c.1553). to Susan I do not promise to wait ... have made a good fight. "43) She is reminicent black woman in in contrast that by in this expres- a new, liberated and self-assertive and waits." Symbolized black is evident in depicting who is individualistic who is "patient is described in being The novel is also unique Thelma, "the New Negro." ideas marks the appearance Smith's progress stage of black of the New Negro is a plus for this long speeches and supporting in this arguments 76 ---- and the other interrupt the ministers' te- flow of the novel. Moreover, readers are annoyed by the repetitive sions such as "never stop.t." "askt the president," "I say unto you" , etc. 45) VII. At the Dawn of the Harlem The rise of the so-called These are can classified 1) Nogro Harlem as internal the Whites. gentsia factor has several and external. The Vogue in the World 2) the Great The internal factors is dominant. of how the novelists factors and World between are 1) the Birth sources. external Migration Relationship Blacks and of a Black Intelli- It is very difficult to clarify It is also difficult which Rev. Stone, Renaissance and 2) the New Negro Movement. which "remarkt Renaissance War I 3) the Jazz Age and 4) the use of expres- to answer have been discussed the question so far influenced the black renaissance. The convention adapted of a black novel with a mulatto in Flight(1926) Chinaberry Johnson, James Vechten and political racial consciousness group during Quicksand such as James close friends .Though of Carl bringing the and Asia controversy 77 ---- . Carl up the it was . poor, from a Dark Princess, He was one of the first writers in Africa Van The Autobiography 1927), thereby W. E. B. DuBois published The F. Downing. advice he republished A. Knopf, (1928) and (1929) and and Henry Renaissance. novel in 1928. Bun on by authors was one of the Man (Alfred of the Harlem standpoint, attacking M. Ashby and on Van Vechten's rear guard black William Plum and Passing and then carried Weldon Johnson of an Ex-Colored literary White; (1931) by Jessie Fauset; (1928) by Nella Larsen Weldon by Walter hero or heroiane was a moral to link and the leader of the Van Vechten's Nigger ---- Heaven. He was anti-Harlemist. His criticizm of Claude McKay's Crisis in 1928— "Home to Harlem for the most part nauseates after the dirtier clarly indicates Johnson parts of its filth I feel distinctly his attitude was on the towards opposite Harlem he evaluated School. side of the Claude McKey Along This Way further Through and testifies prize for black the Jean adovocate Toomer DuBois contributed Johnson published brother strictest and the fact writers in his autobiography and poets did sense but it contributed Renaissance. P. and most As one of the top black Both Johnson people agree James Negro Spirituals not founded and they took the role in many ways to this era. This that to this. the Book of American Rosamond. during of Van Vechten Renaissance, the rear guard for the Renaissance. leaders, his after controversy, The Crisis, W. E. B. DuBois and Charles S. Johnson its literary of the Even a bath,"") the Harlemist. Nigger Heaven's storm he was the staunchest and the like taking me, and qualify greatly as Weldon in 1925 with literature to the development in the of the and DuBois were leaders of the N. A. A. C. that they contributed to the advancement of black people. It is very difficult the Harlem Renaissance. Henry Downing Africa" out the contribution However, gave George Schyler in Slaves Today (1931). black woman Reverend Although Oscar Micheaux and he contributed greatly Dreer, heralded his depictions of his immediate was a filmmaker to black culture. major and minor writers were the ---- 78 rather to Cavalryman . by the idea of treating Herman in terms of minor writers The American and black pride through Smith. Renaissance, these to point "welfare to individualistic of Thelma influnce and on the than a novelist One can safely say that impetus for the New Negro Movement literary and the movements Harlem Renaissance, but extraodinarily which exciting were cultural not merely a movement. NOTES 1) Yorke Jones: Born 1861. Career: Minister. Poetry: Gold and Incense 1925. *The Dictionary Catalog of the Schamburg Collection indicates that Jones is a "Negro author," but not an "American Negro author (Theressa Gunnels Rush: Black American Writers, Past and Present: a Biographical graphical Dictionary, The Scarecrow hereafter referred to as BAWPP) 2) 3) Yorke Jones, ings Publishing Hugh Press, Inc., New Jersey. The Climbers: a Story of Sun-kissed Co., Chicago, 1912, pp.10-11. M. Gloster, Sweethearts, and Biblio1975, p.444. Glad Tid- Negro Voices in American Fiction, Russell and Russell, New York, 1965, p.83. 4) Yorke Jones, op.cit., p.91. 5) 6) Ibid., p.188. Ibid., pp.188--189. 7) Bruce Kellner. ed., The Harlem Renaissance: a Historical Dictionary for the Era, Connecticut, Greenwood Press, 1984, pp.241-242. 8) Oscar Micheaux, The Conquest: the Story of a Negro Pioneer, McGrath Publishing 9) 10) Micheaux, Company, Maryland, ibid., p. 251. Micheaux, The Forged Note: a Romance of the Darker Races, Western Book Supply Company, Nebraska, 1915, p.262. 11) 12) Ibid., p.165. Ibid., p.304. 13) Ibid., pp.304-307. 14) 15) 1969, p.6. Ibid., p.313. Ashby, William Mobil: Born 1889. Drama: The Road to Damacus: a Play in Seven Episodes, Boston, Christopher, 1935. Short Story (periodical) , Opportunity 16 (November, 1938) : 329-330. (BAWPP p.38.) 16) William M. Ashby, Redder Blood, The Cosmopolitan Press, New York, 1915, p.5. 17) Ibid., pp.23-24. 79 ----- 18) Ibid., p.24. 19) 20) Ibid., p.166. 21) 22) Ibid. Ibid., pp.169-170. Ibid., p.186. 23) Otis M. Shackleford: Born 1871. Poetry and Essays, Seeking the Best: Dedicated to the Negro Youth, Kansas City, Mo. Franklin Hudson, 1909 (BAWPP. p. 660.) 24) Otis M. Shackleford, Lillian Press, New York, 1975, p. 20. 25) 26) Ibid., pp.21-23. Ibid., pp.21-22. 27) Ibid., p.200. 28) Ibid. 29) 30) Ibid. 32) 33) 34) Ibid., p.19. Ibid., p.28. Simmons or the Conflict of Sections, AMS Joanne Grant. ed., Black Protest: History Fawcett Premier Book, Conn., 1968, p.197. 31) Ibid., p.16. DOWNING, Henry Francis. DRAMA The Arabian Documents and Analyses, A Born 1851. Lovers; or The Sacred Jar, an Eastern Tale in Four Acts, London: F. Griffiths, 1913. Human Nature; or The Traduced Wife (An Original English Domestic Drama, in four acts) . London: F. Griffiths, 1913. Incentive, 1914. Lord Eldred's Other Daughter. London: F. Griffiths, 1913. A New Coon, in Town, 1914. Placing Paul's Play. London: F. Griffiths, 1913. The Shuttlecock; or Israel in Russia. London: F. Griffiths. 1913.. Voodoo. London: F. Griffiths, 1914. NON-FICTION Liberia and Her People. New York, 1925. A Short History of Liberia (1816-1908) . New York: Amos M. Gailliard, n. d. 80 NOVEL The American reprint Cavalryman: A Liberian ed., Washington, Romance. D. C.: McGrath, New York: 1969 ; New York: Neale, AMS 1917; Press, 1969. CRITICISM Bone. ON DOWNING The Negro Novel in America, p.49. Negro Voices in American Fiction, Gloster. pp.94-95. REVIEWS The American 15 (1918) : 186. Hunt, Ida Gibbs. Journal F. Downing, New York, DREER, Attended The American 3 (October Herman. cum 1911-1914; University, received laude. earned He attended Theological M. A. from University of Illinois, at the University 1914; taught English 26; Professor of English, University, Virginia and Drama, High School Principal Stowe St. Louis. teaching and academic League; Editor-in-Chief Elected 1931; Mo., 1938. Career: Pro- activities were He was campaign director of the Car- Psi Phi Project; director of Sumner to Phi Beta Kappa at Bowdoin of Negro NON-FICTION ---- 81 ---- Life. not speaker Omega Plays 1910- St. Louis, Mo., 1914- Council; of Oracle, and Religious Lynchburg, 1926-30; became Assistant DRAMA Plays 1930, St. Louis, Mo. ; President Dreer's activities. summer of the St. Louis Welfare As- Pan-Hellenic History, Professor of its Negro Achievement Club. Member: College, Lynchburg, 1916 and from Columbia High School, Teacher's of the National Seminary, Seminary, 1930-. He was president ter Woodson School of Negro University, Theological Sumner 1910, and graduated of Chicago, St. Louis, D. C. Education: High School in Washing- College, Virginia and Science, treasurer Romance, AMS 1889 in Washington, an A. B. from Bowdoin D. D. from Douglass sociation; a Liberian School and the M. Street 1919; studied fessor of Latin Cavalryman: Born 12 September the Elementary Historical 1918) : 444-445. 1973, p.306. ton, D. C. He received magna of Negro History p.232,) Henry Press, 36) Man: Crisis (BAWPP. 35) Cavalry limited only to for the Liberty Magazine, High of Douglass and School's College. 1 Director Drama American Literature The History nity, by Negro Authors. New York: Macmillan, of the Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Washington, 1950. D. C.: The Frater- 1940. Negro Leadership in St of Photographic Louis: A Study in Race Relations, Reproductions, University of Chicago, Chicago: Library 1955. NOVELS The Immediate Jewel of His Soul, St. Louis, Washington, The Tie that D. C.: McGrath, Binds, Boston: Mo.: Argus, 1919; reprint 1969. New York: AMS Press, Meador, ed., 1969. 1958. Out of the Night, 1916. BIOGRAPHY Bone. AND CRITICISM The Negro Novel in America, Gayle. Black Expression Negro Voices in American Hughes. The Negro Novelist, University Thomas, ed. Yenser, 1930-31-32, Thomas Yenser, (BAWPP. p.233.) Herman Fiction, Dreer, Who's pp.118-122. p.36. A. and Earl N. Harbert, 1900, Madison: Yenser, p.35. p.110. Gloster. Rees, Robert 37) ON DREER eds. Fifteen of Wisconsin Press, American Authors Before 1971. p.410. Who in Colored America, 3rd ed., New York: AMS Press, New York, p.135. ed.., Who's Who in Colored America The Immediate Jewel of His Soul, I 1.975 (ript.) , p. 59. 38) Ibid., pp.61-62. 39) Ibid., p.64. 40) Ibid., pp. 66-67. 41) Ibid., p.148. 42) Ibid., pp.200-201. 43) Ibid., p.115. 44) Ibid., p.9. 45) Ibid., pp.71-73. 46) Review of Home to Harlem in Crisis 82 35(1928), 202, 211.