1. Survival and song: Women poets of the Harlem Renaissance.
- Author
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Honey, Maureen
- Subjects
- *
AFRICAN American women poets , *HARLEM Renaissance , *AFRICAN American poetry , *TWENTIETH century , *INTELLECTUAL life - Abstract
This paper concerns Black women poets of the Harlem Renaissance. Considered by modern critics to have adopted anachronistic subject matter and to be out of step with the militant race-consciousness of the period, these poets have been largely neglected in discussions of the 1920's, despite the fact that this was the most significant flowering of Black women's writing until the 1960's. I provide an interpretive model that reveals the rebellious messages in this verse, one that helps explain the poets' imaginative choices by placing them in their historical context and liking them to a female poetic tradition. This approach makes clear the affirming nature of Renaissance poetry by women and makes it accessible to us today, anticipating as it does contemporary issues and forging a modern sensibility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1989
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