Harlem Renaissance Packet

Listen, watch, and look at items A-O total watch listen time is roughly an 1 hour (about 58-63 minutes).

To assist you as you in organizing your time, I have were applicable indicated the individual and total watch/listen times for each clip. P& Q are optional texts.

I. Listen [Total listen time – 11 minutes and 55 seconds]:

A. “Just Because She Made Dem Goo Goo Eyes (1900)”[4:55]. Posted by Sheet Music Singer. July 6, 2018. Youtube.com <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpPaTZnNk0w> Accessed 10.4.19.

B. “Manuel Romaine. ‘Daises Won’t Tell’ Edison Standard Record 10399 (1910)” [2:03]. Posted by Tim Gracyk. Sep. 13, 2014. Youtube.com <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-_8VPVX0nos> Accessed 10.4.19.

C. “‘La Pas Ma La’ by Ernest Hogan (1895, Ragtime piano)” [2:22]. Posted by Ragtimedorianhenry. Nov. 10, 2014. Youtube.com <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvu_7l52LF4> Accessed 10.4.19.

D. “Miles & Bob Pratcher: ‘I’m Gonna Live Anyhow Until I Die’ (1959)” [2:35]. Posted by Alan Lomax Archives. Jan. 26, 2011. Youtube.com <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w7fbrwQwc7E> Accessed 10.4.19.

II. Watch [Please note that you will need your BC login credentials to access the library database. Total watch time – 45-50 minutes]:

Dance Black America: A Festival of Modern Jazz, Tap & African Styles [Total watch time – 8 minutes 40 seconds]

E- “Al Perryman as Earl “Snake Hips” Tucker.”  (1:15). Dance Black America: A Festival of Modern Jazz, Tap & African Styles. performed by Charles Moore, 1928-1986 (Pennebaker Hegedus Films, 1984), 1 hour 27 mins. Found on Alexander Street: A Proquest Company.  via DanceOnline: Dance in Video. March 14, 2019.

F- “Leon Johnson as Master Juba.”  (1:35). Dance Black America: A Festival of Modern Jazz, Tap & African Styles. performed by Charles Moore, 1928-1986 (Pennebaker Hegedus Films, 1984), 1 hour 27 mins. Found on Alexander Street: A Proquest Company.  via DanceOnline: Dance in Video. March 14, 2019.

G- “The Cakewalk.” (1:56). Dance Black America: A Festival of Modern Jazz, Tap & African Styles. performed by Charles Moore, 1928-1986 (Pennebaker Hegedus Films, 1984), 1 hour 27 mins. Found on Alexander Street: A Proquest Company.  via DanceOnline: Dance in Video. March 14, 2019.

“H- Lindy Hop.” (3:59). Dance Black America: A Festival of Modern Jazz, Tap & African Styles. performed by Charles Moore, 1928-1986 (Pennebaker Hegedus Films, 1984), 1 hour 27 mins. Found on Alexander Street: A Proquest Company.  via DanceOnline: Dance in Video. March 14, 2019.

The Call of the Jitterbug [Total watch time 36 minutes and 32 seconds]

I- “Lindy Hop or Jitterbug”  (8:25). The Call of the Jitterbug.  produced by Tana Ross, Jesper Sorensen and Vibeke Winding; performed by Frankie Manning, 1914-2009, Norma Miller, 1919-, Dizzy Gillespie, 1917-1993, Mama Lu Parks and Sugar Sullivan-Niles (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 1989), 37 mins

J- “Passing it On.” (7:55). The Call of the Jitterbug.  produced by Tana Ross, Jesper Sorensen and Vibeke Winding; performed by Frankie Manning, 1914-2009, Norma Miller, 1919-, Dizzy Gillespie, 1917-1993, Mama Lu Parks and Sugar Sullivan-Niles (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 1989), 37 mins

K- “Rhythms.” (7:08). The Call of the Jitterbug.  produced by Tana Ross, Jesper Sorensen and Vibeke Winding; performed by Frankie Manning, 1914-2009, Norma Miller, 1919-, Dizzy Gillespie, 1917-1993, Mama Lu Parks and Sugar Sullivan-Niles (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 1989), 37 mins

L- “A Joyful Legacy.” (13:04).  The Call of the Jitterbug.  produced by Tana Ross, Jesper Sorensen and Vibeke Winding; performed by Frankie Manning, 1914-2009, Norma Miller, 1919-, Dizzy Gillespie, 1917-1993, Mama Lu Parks and Sugar Sullivan-Niles (New York, NY: Filmakers Library, 1989), 37 minsDance in Video. March 14, 2019.

III.  Look at Visual Art by Augusta Savage:

M- “Augusta Savage (1892-1962).” The Melvin Holmes Collection of African American Art.  Online at <theholmesgallery.com>  Accessed 3/15/19.

N- “Artist of Color Spotlight: Augusta Savage.” Mia Araujo Fine Art and Illustration.  Online at <www.art-by-mia.com> Accessed 3/15/19.

O- “Lenore, a Portrait Bust Sculpture by Augusta Savage.” Digital Public Library of America. Online at <dp.la>  Accessed 3/15/19.

Read Zora Neale Hurston on Negro Art & Performance:

P- Hurston, Zora Neale. “Color Struck: A Play in Four Scenes.” FIRE!! A Quarterly Dedicated to Younger Negro Artists. Volume 1 Issue 1. New York: The Fire Press, 1926. 7-14.  Online at <https://issuu.com/poczineproject> Accessed 3/15/19. (8 pages)

Q- Hurston, Zora Neale.”Characteristics of Negro Expression” (1934) in The Sanctified Church, Turtle Island, Berkeley, 1981. 49-68.  Found on http://www.ypsilonediteur.com. Accessed 3/15/19.  Pdf available here: “Characteristics of Negro Expression” by Zora Neale Hurston.  (20 pages)

R- Hurston, Zora Neale. “Art and Such.” Found on the Digital Public Library of America.  <www.dp.la.org> Accessed January 25, 2019. (10 pages double spaced)

S- Hurston, Zora Neale. “The Pet Negro System.” The American Mercury  (May 1943): 593-600. Found online at The Unz Review: An Alternative Media Collection. <www.unz.com> Accessed January 25, 2019. (8 pages)

Additional (Optional) Texts:

T- “Watch: Meet Augusta Savage, The Most Important African-American Sculptor.” Timeline. May 23, 2017.  Online at <Timeline.com> Accessed 3/15/19.

U- “Elizabeth Cotten – ‘Oh Babe It Ain’t No Lie'” [4:43]. Posted by Schroomeryslearyfan. Feb. 18, 2010. YouTube.com <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6GFM6B0oQ8M> Accessed 10.4.19.

V-  Hughes, Langston. “The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain.” (1926) Found on “Modern American Poetry.” English Department. University of Illinois.

Project Proposal 10/15

Group Members: Franciel G., Zulmary D., Jennie V., Joe .L

What Is Due Friday 10/15

Note: You may email me your responses directly as a Word document (not a Google Doc or a PDF, but a Word Document), but I encourage you to post your project check-ins to the class site.* Doing so facilitates the feedback loop and also allows you to get a sense of how other groups are tackling similar or related issues.

What

Describe the form you intend your final project to take:

  • For our project, we envision to hold a panel discussion to talk about racial violence and class differences in today’s society. How does BC serve as a “free space”, relating to the “free city” of Philadelphia – (The Garies and their Friends). We will draw on our personal experiences on campus, and relate them to the events following the Garies family move to Philadelphia. We will also incorporate parts of the novel “FIRE!!” To draw on racial, class, and sexuality and incorporate that into our experience, our current setting and how movement/constraint has changed or stayed the same. Also how movement and constraint limits or promotes our different experiences based on our difference in identity and experience at BC. (Also use the video Arthur Java: Love Is The Message, The Message Is Death)
  • This will be a back and forth discussion about our topic with our peers. We will ask questions in order to get their opinions. We will also debrief and give our peers the opportunity to ask us questions as well.
  • (4 BC student’s, not including us) friends each from different backgrounds (ethnicity, race, gender, etc) with different viewpoints about the general topic about the view points (and various response)
  • Sit at long tables in front of the classroom, give an intro and the topic run down. We give questions, they respond, they also ask questions (talk show/interview)
  • Genre: Literary fiction, nonfiction, historical/informational
  • Form: Video pre-recorded (open panel discussion with questions)
  • Duration: 5-7 minutes
  • Medium: a script format, but also interview style when we begin asking questions to the four participants and getting their input. The very end will turn into a discussion or deep dive 
  • Featured Content: We will have an open discussion using at least three of the class texts. We will discuss racism and class differences. We will connect movement and constraint to our discussions of race and class. For example, the Garies moved to a place that they thought would be more free and less oppressive but they actually ended up feeling more constrained and unwelcomed into Northern society due to racism and classism. 
  • Location: Virtual, will take place in a classroom or a lounge setting where we can use a round table (probably reserve a study space in O’Neill Library)

Who

Describe your ideal audience/reader(s) for your project in terms of number, demographic, interest, background knowledge, and other relevant demographics.

  • One intended audience would be prospective students of Boston College, especially minority students, who could get a better understanding of the racial and social structure of BC from the perspective of actual students. This would allow students to not only make a more informed decision on their future, but also give current students a platform to voice their own concerns or opinions regarding racism at BC, and potentially require faculty to more carefully consider the reputation BC has with incoming students and how they can improve it.
  • Another intended audience would be the BC administration. While BC administration makes it required for all freshmen to take Diversity EDU fall semester in the first few weeks of coming to campus. Although this is a sign of progression, student’s often see the training as a “one and done”, especially because it is in a virtual online format. Student’s must score at least a 70% to pass, and once they have completed the training they are officially done with a “pass”. However, racism continues to occur throughout the campus every year despite the training module, so we think the BC administration should require more continuous training in person style. They would be a great audience because we are giving voice to all students across campus of different race, age, sociology-economic status, backgrounds, etc. The project can give administration The chance to see how students at BC have varying experiences despite the “structures” or lack thereof, that are in place. 
  • Another intended audience would be white students at BC who do not seem as informed about issues regarding racism and classism (A white student at BC once said that the whole concept/idea of having an MLE floor is racist. How can we better implement programs like Diversity EDU to ensure that white students on campus are more informed/culturally sensitive and so that people of color feel less targeted?)

Why 

At this point, how do you imagine that your proposed project will incorporate the 10 required project elements?

1 – The ways in which racism and classism affect movement and constraint in spaces that are supposed to be “free” but are actually oppressing

2 – Using the themes and ideas of “free city”, freedom, and liberation throughout the three central texts that we are using (see #3), how does these texts and our own BC experiences speak to tensions and issues relevant to the BC community 

3 – The Garies and their Friends, Fire!!, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, (Also use the video Arthur Java: Love Is The Message, The Message Is Death)

4 – Research was done on the “free city” of Philadelphia in the 1830/1840s and what it was like for a person of color to be living there in that time period (drawing from Zulmary’s panel paper). We will also use various slave narrative texts and other reputable/informational sources. 

5 – 

  • Genre: Literary fiction, nonfiction, historical/informational
  • Form: Video pre-recorded (open panel discussion with questions)
  • Duration: 5-7 minutes
  • Medium: a script format, but also interview style when we begin asking questions to the four participants and getting their input. The very end will turn into a discussion or deep dive 
  • Media: Criticize The Heights – a racist incident happened but they posted an article about the flowers outside of Walsh (BLM comments were deleted)

6 – The objective of the project is to gather the opinions of BC students regarding their own experiences of race and the reputation of BC. The purpose of those opinions and experiences are intended to inform current and future BC students about the perspective of the student body regarding the reputation BC has for race, while also making BC faculty aware of the issues that minority students face on campus and the steps BC should or doesn’t take to alleviate them.

7 – Prospective BC students, BC administration, and uninformed/culturally insensitive white student at BC

8 – (Already complete, posted on class website and at the top of the document) For project check in, we have created a group chat that we communicate in. We also set up zoom meetings to add on to the project format and details, as well as scheduling in person events

9 – Pre-recorded video that is an open panel discussion with questions (5-7 minutes long)

10 –

WHERE & HOW 

What kinds of administrative permissions or resources might you need to acquire to accomplish this project? (i.e. space reservations, flyer permission, etc.)

  • Reserve a study room in the library, or use a classroom after hours (if unlocked), or use a lounge space.
  • We want to set ourselves up at a long table at the front of the classroom while our peers sit in front of us
  • We will use a script and present a pre-recorded video 

Please break the project down into 8-12 detailed and actionable steps or tasks.

Indicate which group members will take the lead on each of the above 8-12 steps.

  1. Each member will be assigned to find one friend to be apart of the project (for panel/ interview/ discussion)
  2. Gathering black history research (2 people)
  3. Gathering research from our three course texts (2 people) 
  4. Getting location secured for recording project session (1 person)
  5. Write the script (everyone)
  6. Creating questions we will potentially ask our peers (2-3 people)
  7. Record panel video (everyone)
  8. Write reflection paper (everyone)

Using the information from 6&7, please provide a timeline (or production calendar) for your project completion.

  • Today, we worked on the general breakdown of how we envision the project. Once-twice a week we will communicate about the project via zoom or in person to get a sense of each other’s schedule and meet up to plan logistics. We will start with historical research, solidifying participants, and writing the script. Then we will record our video and do the write up section “last,”so that we have all of our resources before officially writing. Right now we’re taking midterms so our schedules vary drastically, but the week after next week we would be able to get a better sense of each other’s schedule and break down a more specific timeline. (Week of October 25th)

QUESTIONS

Include at least two questions you have about either your project in particular and/or about the project assignment in general:

  1. For the written portion of the project, are we focusing on specific parts of the text by adding quotes, or are we just referencing different parts of the text and explaining how it connects or relates to parts in the project?
  1. How “deep” does our historical research have to be for the written portion, keeping in mind that it is a 4-5 page limit? Are we mimicking the panel format of “objects” in time or just history on specific topics we will be talking about and where it is brought up in the text?
  1. What is a pose and non-prose text?

Midterm Journal Assessment Due 10/16 by noon

Reflection on Content

  • Describe a few of the connections you see between your different entries?
  • As you reflect on your entries, do you notice any patterns? Do you find any tensions between your thoughts in one entry and your ideas in another? Are their contradictions in how you’re thinking in one entry and how you’re thinking in another entry? Or are there entries where your method of reasoning and contemplating switches within that one entry?! Note: Tensions; shifts; and contradictions in our thinking and method of reasoning can sometimes aren’t inherently bad. These points can be productive for further exploration.
  • Compare and contrast your first entry and your latest entry. Are their similarities to the types of questions and topics you’re focusing on? Do you notice any differences or changes in what and/or how you’re observing and thinking through your observations?
  • Are their questions, texts, and / or content that you wished you had of been able to focus on and/or explore in your journal? Why?
  • Based on the content of your journal entries thus far, pose two critical questions related to this course that you might explore in your final project?

Reflecting on Form

  • Describe the medium and form of your journal at this point of the semester. What does your journal look like? What does your journal feel like? What does your journal smell like? What does it sound like when you open your journal? (And yeah, if you want to describe how your journal tastes, go for it!) What type of material are you using for your journal? Are you using a marble notebook or a three ring binder or a collage book or a handcrafted notebook made out of paper you pressed yourself with natural fibers from your favorite t-shirts? How else can you describe the specifics of your journal (as opposed to a journal similar style journal made from similar materials)?
  • How does the physical form of your journal affect your experience of thinking and writing in your journal?
  • How does the physical form of your journal affect the way you or (a fictional) someone else might read your particular journal entries? What kinds of connections does the physical form of your journal encourage? What kinds of connections does it discourage?

Reflection on Process and Experience

  • When do you journal? Do you journal at a consistent time? Do you do your entries all in one sitting or over several smaller bits of time? Do you listen to music or eat or sip tea when you journal? Do you have any pre, during, or post writing rituals?
  • Where do you journal? Describe the physical space(s) you journal in (think: lighting; size; privacy; comfort; noise; aesthetic; temperature; etc.).
  • How long do you spend on your journal entries? Do you edit and/or revise your entries?
  • What types of non-word based journal entries / contributions have you included in your journal? (ex. doodles, highlights, collages, etc.)
  • Reflect on how you felt about doing this assignment in the first two weeks and how you feel about doing the assignment now? Has your physical, mental, and/or emotional experience with your journal entries changed in any way? How so?
  • Which journal entry did you enjoy doing the most? Why?

Reflecting Forward

  • What about your journaling process would you like to modify for the second half of the semester?
  • What about the way you approach the content of your journal entries would you like to modify in the second half of the semester?
  • What about the overall shape, medium, structure, form of your journal would you like to modify in the second half of the semester? How? Why?
  • What about the ways you reflect on and make connections between entries would you like to modify in the second half of the semester?
  • What about your journaling experience do you hope to adjust in the second half of the semester?
  • What about your journaling process, content, form, reflection, and/or experience do you currently feel good about and hope to continue and/or develop further in the second part of the semester?

Featured Journal Entry

  • Please identify one entry that you would like for me to read for this midterm assessment:
  • Make sure you have clearly marked the entry in your journal and/or provided me with enough information to find the entry easily.