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Harlem History

"Harlem, New York, was a place where for the first time Negroes got out into the mainstream of the dramatic world. You had extraordinarily large dramatic movements."
—A. Philip Randolph

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Special Feature: Treasures from the M. Moran Weston Papers
Rarely seen images from a 1945 Negro Freedom Rally are accompanied by video of Professor Manning Marable providing historical background on them. A short slide show of other images from the Weston papers is also included.

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Arts & Culture


Farah Griffin


Farah Griffin, director of the Institute for Research in African-American Studies and professor of English and comparative literature and African-American studies, discusses Harlem through the eyes of Ann Petry, a novelist, journalist, and social activist, who wrote about life in Harlem during the 1930s and 1940s. Petry, a best-selling author in her time, laced her writing with remarkable details that were informed by her work as a Harlem-based consumer advocate, her engagement with The American Negro Theater, and her role as a women's page writer for Harlem publications. Professor Griffin cites two passages from the writings of Ann Petry. One is a poetic description from the novel The Street, in which the main character gets off the A train and comes up out of the subway, merging into the crowds on the streets of Harlem where she finally can feel at home. The second passage, from the short story "In Darkness and Confusion," describes a scene during the Harlem riots of 1943.

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