Listen "What Was the Harlem Renaissance? by Sherri L. Smith"
Episode Synopsis
Please visit https://thebookvoice.com/podcasts/1/audiobook/512001 to listen full audiobooks.
Title: What Was the Harlem Renaissance?
Author: Sherri L. Smith
Narrator: Tashi Thomas
Format: Unabridged Audiobook
Length: 1 hour 4 minutes
Release date: December 28, 2021
Genres: Non-fiction
Publisher's Summary:
In this audiobook from the #1 New York Times bestselling series, learn how this vibrant Black neighborhood in upper Manhattan became home to the leading Black writers, artists, and musicians of the 1920s and 1930s. Travel back in time to the 1920s and 1930s to the sounds of jazz in nightclubs and the 24-hours-a-day bustle of the famous Black neighborhood of Harlem in uptown Manhattan. It was a dazzling time when there was an outpouring of the arts of African Americans--the poetry of Langston Hughes; the novels of Zora Neale Hurston; the sculptures of Augusta Savage and that brand-new music called jazz as only Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong could play it. Author Sherri Smith traces Harlem's history all the way to its seventeenth-century roots, and explains how the early-twentieth-century Great Migration brought African Americans from the deep South to New York City and gave birth to the golden years of the Harlem Renaissance.
Title: What Was the Harlem Renaissance?
Author: Sherri L. Smith
Narrator: Tashi Thomas
Format: Unabridged Audiobook
Length: 1 hour 4 minutes
Release date: December 28, 2021
Genres: Non-fiction
Publisher's Summary:
In this audiobook from the #1 New York Times bestselling series, learn how this vibrant Black neighborhood in upper Manhattan became home to the leading Black writers, artists, and musicians of the 1920s and 1930s. Travel back in time to the 1920s and 1930s to the sounds of jazz in nightclubs and the 24-hours-a-day bustle of the famous Black neighborhood of Harlem in uptown Manhattan. It was a dazzling time when there was an outpouring of the arts of African Americans--the poetry of Langston Hughes; the novels of Zora Neale Hurston; the sculptures of Augusta Savage and that brand-new music called jazz as only Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong could play it. Author Sherri Smith traces Harlem's history all the way to its seventeenth-century roots, and explains how the early-twentieth-century Great Migration brought African Americans from the deep South to New York City and gave birth to the golden years of the Harlem Renaissance.
More episodes of the podcast Don’t Miss Your Ears To A Game-Changing Full Audiobook.
The Pied Piper of Hamelin, and Paul Revere's Ride by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Robert Browning
01/01/2009
Answer Them Nothing: Bringing Down the Polygamous Empire of Warren Jeffs by Debra Weyermann
23/10/2018
The Faker Rulebook by Baylin Crow
28/03/2023
Weaving the Web by Tim Berners-Lee
13/06/2006
The Heart of an Agent by Tracey J. Lyons
07/11/2017
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.