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  1. Nov 28, 2016 · Zora Neale Hurston was a dynamic interdisciplinary writer and ethnographer who earned acclaim during the Harlem Renaissance, whose brilliant works of fiction were marginalized from popular and academic discourses until the 1970s, and whose pioneering contributions to anthropology and folklore are championed by 21st-century anthropologists of ...

  2. Jan 25, 2023 · In the 1980s, the late Robert E. Hemenway published the first biography of ZNH, Zora Neale Hurston: A Literary Biography; it focused primarily on her literary contributions, and he closed it...

    • Irma Mcclaurin
    • Early Life in Eatonville. The circumstances of her early life and family and the influence of growing up in Eatonville, Florida, are of primary importance in understanding Zora Neale Hurston's life and works.
    • The Harlem Renaissance. The following year Hurston submitted a story, Spunk, and a play, Color Struck, to Opportunity's literary contest. Both won prizes.
    • “The Spyglass of Anthropology” At Barnard College, Hurston studied anthropology under Franz Boas, a noted authority in the field. She found that anthropology offered a scientific framework for her folklore.
    • Patronage. In the fall of 1927 Hurston met Mrs. Rufus Osgood Mason, a wealthy white woman who was to play a major role in her life. Mrs. Mason was patron to several black artists, including Langston Hughes.
  3. Jul 4, 2018 · By inventing a narrator who witnesses, even participates in, the performance of folk traditions, she combated the inevitable distortion of an oral culture by its textual documentation. Hurston’s motives for presenting black folklore were, in part, political.

  4. In more recent times, women have been shattering stereotypes and breaking into the literary field. This is true for Zora Neale Hurston and her 1926 short story, Sweat . Hurston was a preeminent African American female writer who was prominent in the Harlem Renaissance, a predominantly black cultural movement of the 1920s and 1930s (Boyd 2007).

  5. Mar 19, 2019 · Yuval Taylor’s “Zora and Langston: A Story of Friendship and Betrayal” is an overdue study of the famous yet underdiscussed friendship and literary collaboration between Zora Neale Hurston ...

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  7. Geography and migration played a key role in the description and formation of the Harlem Renaissance-New Negro era. The Great Migration, which began just prior to World War I and continued well after, had a profound effect both on the cities of the North and the southern, rural communities left behind.

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