The Harlem Renaissance Weekly
Reading the New Negro Movement in 1920s Black Newspapers
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:20th Nov '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Offers a strikingly new, politically engaged New Negro Renaissance through the lens of Black newspaper fiction.
Introducing readers to a fascinating trove of serial fiction published in 1920s Black newspapers, this book upends the prevailing view of the Renaissance as a strictly cultural phenomenon. Instead, Martha Patterson shows newspaper fiction's deep investment in sociopolitical debates over drinking, interracial marriage, and anti-lynching activism.Martha H. Patterson's The Harlem Renaissance Weekly offers a groundbreaking study of the Black literary renaissance that appeared in weekly Black newspapers in the 1920s. In her richly contexualized readings, she uncovers a popular Harlem Renaissance deeply committed to political and social issues: the fight against lynching, segregation, and anti-miscegenation laws and to the challenges posed by urban vice, infidelity, and family separation during the Great Migration. Through mostly romantic plots, Black newspaper fiction writers emphasized that the cabaret and church, white and black race leader, flapper and race mother could be bridged on behalf of racial well-being and civil rights justice. As the Ku Klux Klan grew increasingly powerful, this fiction offered readers not only entertainment, but also cautionary advice, political hope, and weekly affirmation of their full humanity. With a foreword by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., this powerful study revises understanding of an important dimension of the Harlem Renaissance.
ISBN: 9781009566681
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 569g
316 pages