Neale Arnold Rosmann has written:
'The relationship between attitude and personality variables in marriage and age, sex, and marital status'
John Hurston and Lucy Ann Hurston (née Potts) were the parents of Zora Neale Hurston.
the desire for personal freedom felt by both black and white women
She wrote books mostly the color purple talked about racial equality
blue
The Harlem Renaissance was a pivotal movement in the 1920s that celebrated and renewed African American culture through art, music, literature, drama, and dance. Centered in Harlem, New York, it showcased the talents of influential figures like Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Duke Ellington, and Louis Armstrong. This cultural flowering emphasized racial pride, artistic expression, and the exploration of African American identity, significantly shaping American culture as a whole.
I. Neale has written: 'Knowledge acquisition for expert systems'
Caroline Neale has written: 'Writing \\' -- subject(s): Historiography
Jane K. Neale has written: 'Tales for village schools'
Neale McDevitt has written: 'One day even Trevi will crumble'
John Neale has written: 'Longitude delineated'
J. E. Neale has written: 'Elizabeth I and her Parliaments' -- subject(s): Politics and government
Stephen Neale has written: 'The classical Hollywood reader' -- subject(s): Motion pictures, History
Neale B. Mason has written: 'Essentials of eighteenth-century counterpoint' -- subject(s): Counterpoint
J.W Neale has written: 'An Ostracod fauna from Halley Bay, Coats Lands, British Antarctic Teritory'
Oscar W. Neale has written: 'World-famous pictures' -- subject(s): Art, Study and teaching
Wilfred Groves Neale has written: 'The tides of war and the Port of Bristol, 1914-1918' -- subject(s): Harbor
R. G. Neale has written: 'Great Britain and United States expansion: 1898-1900' -- subject(s): Colonial question, Foreign relations