The Chicago Renaissance

536 Words2 Pages

Chicago has played a major role in American Literary history. As African American writers struggled to express their unique literary voice, they sought to celebrate diversity of the American people and to develop a unifying national identity for themselves (Woolley). Between 1935 and 1950, there were two social and economic conditions that led to the Chicago Renaissance. The first was the great migration; when tens of thousands of African Americans moved to Chicago from the south seeking a life of freedom from legally sanctioned racial discrimination and the opportunity to express themselves freely through literature and the arts. The second was the Great Depression, a time when farming and rural areas suffered the greatest economic decline in history causing many African Americans to move to more industrialized areas to seek employment (Bone). Richard Wright was a young migrant that moved to Chicago in December of 1927. He was nineteen years old and like other immigrants sought a better life, one without violence, intimidation, humiliation, and spiritual claustrophobia. Wright hel...

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