because it symbolized a new beginning in freedom and culture. and it also gave people the idea that anything was possible. it started new business and increased jobs and economic growth. also giving Africans Americans some type of authority of who they were.
what was the
A literary and cultural movement in the 1920s and 1930s that featured many great African-American writers was the Harlem Renaissance. Writes such as Zora Neal Hurston, Langston Hughes, and W. E. B. DuBois came from this movement.
a period of great achievement by African-American writers, artists and performers
They were both british
great trek
It started in 1815 and stopped around 1855.
The Great Migration
The Harlem Renaissance influenced American society in several ways. Chief among these were the Great Migration and the spread of African American arts and culture.
the Harlem renaissance was a time when African Americans were trying to come out from their shadows and do more things and get away from racism so the great migration was the time when African Americans were migrating north to get away from it all and make a better life.
During the "Great Migration" millions of African Americans moved from the south to northern cities, one of which was New York, where they settled in Harlem. They transformed the entire culture and environment of Harlem, and the people of the Harlem Renaissance were the African Americans who moved to New York during the "Great Migration".
If you are referring to the African diaspora that is something COMPLETELY different
The Great Migration included Blacks also known as African Americans, Jim Crow Laws - segregation, and The Harlem Renaissance which made many Africans famous. For ex: Louis Armstrong or Anderson.
It just happened
because a lot of people had to leave the south and move to the north
The effects of the great depression caused the Harlem Renaissance to collapse. The economic downturn led to the departure of Harlem's prominent writers.
A literary and cultural movement in the 1920s and 1930s that featured many great African-American writers was the Harlem Renaissance. Writes such as Zora Neal Hurston, Langston Hughes, and W. E. B. DuBois came from this movement.
Architecture
During the Great Migration, African Americans moved north to large cities due to increased oppression in the South, greater accessibility to education, and an increase in job opportunities following WWI. The most popular destination was New York's City's upper-Manhattan neighborhood of Harlem, where the increase in the population of African Americans led to the Harlem Renaissance.