Respuesta :

Answer:

Harlem renaissance spread African American culture to white Americans.

Explanation:

    At the turn of the twentieth century Harlem became a destination for African Americans of all backgrounds. From unskilled workers to an educated middle class, they shared common experiences of slavery, emancipation, and racial oppression, as well as the determination to forge a new identity as free people.

    The Great Migration attracted to Harlem some of the greatest minds and brightest talents of the day, an impressive array of African American artists and scholars. Between the end of World War I and the mid-1930s, they produced one of the most significant eras of cultural expression in the nation's history - the Harlem Renaissance.

    However, this cultural explosion has also occurred in Cleveland, Los Angeles and many cities shaped by the great migration. Alain Locke, a Harvard-educated writer, critic, and teacher who became known as the "dean" of the Harlem Renaissance, described it as a "spiritual maturation" in which African Americans turned "social delusion into racial pride."

    Harlem's renaissance encompassed poetry and prose, painting and sculpture, jazz and swing, opera and dance. What united these diverse art forms was their realistic presentation of what it meant to be black in America, what writer Langston Hughes called "the expression of our dark-skinned individual selves," as well as a new militancy in the affirmation of their civil rights. and politicians. .