Women of the Harlem Renaissance
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harlemwomen.bsky.social
Women of the Harlem Renaissance
@harlemwomen.bsky.social
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Celebrating the women writers who helped forge a renaissance of art and ideals. Halesitepress.com https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DR78DB55 #harlemrenaissance #harlemrenaissancewomen #harlemrenaissancewriters #harlemrenaissancepoets
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Jessie Fauset, a 1921 Pan-African Congress delegate, was nearly denied a passport. The government had to be convinced, by references & interviews, that the female editor of one of the first Black periodicals was “a worthy citizen.”

#harlemrenaissancewomen #harlemrenaissance #border #passport
WORD-WONDERS... Marita Bonner was a prolific writer of short stories, essays, and plays. With a lyrical, imaginative, and sometimes experimental writing style, she addressed themes of racism, gender bias, and economic hardship.

#harlemrenaissance #harlemrenaissancewomen #africanamericanwriters
WORDWEAVER: Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson (1875-1935) was a prolific writer, a diligent activist, and an essential contributor to the Harlem Renaissance.

(See Essential Short Stories by Women of the Harlem Renaissance: Vol 1.)

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Reposted by Women of the Harlem Renaissance
Happy Birthday to Harlem Renaissance artist Laura Wheeler Waring (May 26, 1887-Feb 3, 1948). Her drawing for the April 1926 cover of The Crisis, a periodical founded by W.E.B. Du Bois, won honorable mention in a 1925 art and literature contest.
#harlemrenaissance #laurawheeler #laurawheelerwaring
Look for the Halesite Press booth, offering distinctive Harlem Renaissance anthologies and magazine reproductions. Long Island, NY ❤️
#bookfair #harlemrenaissance #harlemrenaissancewriters
Anne Spencer was a widely anthologized Harlem Renaissance poet and activist. In 1973, she became one of the first African American women poets featured in the Norton Anthology of Modern Poetry.
#harlemrenaissancepoetry #harlemrenaissancewriters #harlemrenaissancewomen #annespencer
Anne Spencer is a celebrated Harlem Renaissance poet and activist. Her home in Lynchburg VA, the hub of her diligent activism and Harlem Renaissance literary salons, is now the Anne Spencer House & Garden Museum.
#harlemrenaissancepoetry #harlemrenaissancewomen #harlemrenaissancewriters #annespencer
Essential Short Stories by Women of the Harlem Renaissance
Jessie Fauset, a 1921 Pan-African Congress delegate, was nearly denied a passport. The government had to be convinced, by references & interviews, that the female editor of one of the first Black periodicals was “a worthy citizen.”

#harlemrenaissancewomen #harlemrenaissance #border #passport
A passionate and prolific writer, Angelina Grimké’s impressive body of poetry focuses on love and longing. Her short stories and her ground-breaking play, Rachel, were strong indictments of racial injustice.
#harlemrenaissance #harlemrenaissancewomen #harlemrenaissancepoets
Lucy Ariel Williams (later using her married name, Ariel Williams Halloway) was an accomplished poet and pianist. One of her early poems, “Northboun’,” shared first and second prize with “No Images” by Waring Cuney in Opportunity’s 1926 literary contest.
In national Harlem Renaissance literary contests, NEARLY HALF of the award-winning poems were by WOMEN. This first-place poem by Lucy Ariel Williams is distinct because Williams did what women weren't expected to do—use dialect.

#harlemrenaissancewomen #harlemrenaissancepoetry
On Dec 3, 1927, W.E.B. Du Bois gathered writers and editors at the Civic Club in NYC to celebrate the winners of the 1927 national literary contest. The women stole the show in the category of Literary Art and Expression. Three of the winners were Marita Bonner, Brenda Moryck, and Eulalie Spence.