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  1. Hace 3 días · Both explored characters of mixed racial heritage who struggled to define their racial identity in a world of prejudice and racism. Langston Hughes addressed similar themes in his poem "Cross," and in his 1931 play, Mulatto, as did Jessie Fauset in her 1929 novel, Plum Bun.

  2. 19 de jun. de 2024 · In Roanoke, Va., which in 1921 had opened one of the first branch libraries for Black readers in the South, a young librarian named Virginia Lee established a Jessie Fauset reading club (one of...

  3. 13 de jun. de 2024 · Hurston, Harlem Renaissance author Jessie Fauset, former executive secretary of the NAACP James Weldon Johnson, and his NAACP successor Walter White all vocally supported the play. Meyer would later say her play gave her something “worth living for.”

  4. 20 de jun. de 2024 · LANGSTON HUGHES CHRONOLOGY. 1920s. THIS ITEM LH with Zora Neale Hurston and Jessie Fauset, Tuskegee, Alabama. Container / Volume. Box 458, folder 11074. View item information in Archives at Yale. View full finding aid for Langston Hughes papers (JWJ MSS 26) Access And Usage Rights. Public. Rights.

  5. 14 de jun. de 2024 · In There Is Confusion (1924) Jessie Redmon Fauset considered the transformation of mainstream culture effected by the new Black middle class and by the Black creative arts. Using the conventions of the novel of manners, Fauset advanced themes of racial uplift, patriotism, optimism for the future, and Black solidarity.

  6. 19 de jun. de 2024 · In Roanoke, Va., which in 1921 had opened one of the first branch libraries for Black readers in the South, a young librarian named Virginia Lee established a Jessie Fauset reading club (one of the many Black literary groups that sprung up across the country that decade named for a Harlem Renaissance figure) and quietly started assembling a ...

  7. 14 de jun. de 2024 · Meet key women writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Learn more about women writers of the Harlem Renaissance. See all videos for this article. While the most celebrated poets of the Harlem Renaissance were men—Hughes, McKay, Cullen—Black women’s poetry was far from incidental to the movement.