THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE AND THE CANONIZATION OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERARY EXPERIENCE

Authors

  • Ibrahim Mainimo Wirba Department of English Modern Letters, HTTC, The University of Bamenda
  • Hans Ndah Nyaa Department of English Modern Letters, HTTC, The University of Bamenda

Keywords:

Harlem Renaissance, Canon-Formation, Black Literature, African-America, Poetry

Abstract

The Harlem Renaissance, an African-American socio-political, cultural and literary movement, was known, among many other things, for its literary outpourings and has continued to attract a flurry of critical attention. While critics have focussed on the ripple effects of the cutting-edge issues of    identity,   subjectivities and cultural rootedness which pre-occupied the writers of the Harlem Renaissance and which have undoubtedly traversed national and international boundaries, it is its canon-forming potentialities that we explore in this paper. Thus based on a new-historicist approach, the paper seeks to examine the various ways by which the movement has subtended the present canonical status of the African-American literary tradition. The paper delves into the historiography of canonicity in African-American literature before critically analysing the poetry of the Harlem Renaissance to arrive at the conclusion that the movement was catalytic toward the eventual canonization of black American literature.

Published

28-02-2021 — Updated on 28-02-2021

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How to Cite

Wirba , I. M., & Nyaa, . H. N. (2021). THE HARLEM RENAISSANCE AND THE CANONIZATION OF THE AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERARY EXPERIENCE. JOURNAL OF ARTS AND HUMANITIES, 4(1), 104–118. Retrieved from https://www.fauba.scientific-board.com/index.php/jah/article/view/41

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Articles