It's Lit!
Season 2, Episode 14: Literary Icons You NEED to Know From the Harlem Renaissance
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One of the most influential periods in Black American History post-slavery is the Harlem Renaissance, an intellectual, social, and artistic explosion centered in Harlem, Manhattan, New York City. Novels like Passing by Nella Larsen, Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston, and the poetry of Langston Hughes were all written during this period and have become important pieces of the American literary canon. Still, when discussing this topic we tend to flatten the dynamic personalities and identities of the Black folk responsible for making this period so iconic in the literary sense. Not only in America, but as part of the entire Black diaspora.
All Episodes - Season 2
Episode 1
The Case for Fan Fiction
Episode 2
Afrofuturism From Books to Blockbusters
Episode 3
How Fictional Pandemics Reflect the Real Thing
Episode 4
Why We Still Love Little Women, 150 Years Later
Episode 5
The Byronic Hero: Isn’t it Byronic?
Episode 6
The Constructed Languages of JRR Tolkien
Episode 7
War and Peace and Everything Else
Episode 8
The It’s Lit! Musical Episode
Episode 9
The Fiery History of Banned Books
Episode 10
The (Stephen) King of Horror
Episode 11
Are Graphic Novels... Novels?
Episode 12
Dune, The Most Important Sci Fi Series Ever?
Episode 13
Anne Rice, The Queen of Literary Monsters
Episode 14
Literary Icons You NEED to Know From the Harlem Renaissance
Episode 15
How Do You Write a Bestseller?