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Forgotten Pages: Black Literary Magazines in the 1920s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 January 2009
Extract
Towards the end of his life, Langston Hughes wrote an article about Harlem during the 1920s. In his narration, he paused fondly over memories of Sugar Hill. At 409 Edgecombe, the address of the ‘tallest apartment house’ on the hill, lived Walter and Gladys White, who gave frequent parties for their friends; Aaron and Alta Douglas, who ‘ always had a bottle of ginger ale in the ice box for those who brought along refreshments’ Elmer Anderson Carter, who succeeded Charles S. Johnson to the editorship of Opportunity; and actor Ivan Sharpe and his wife Evie. Just below the hill, in the Dunbar Apartments, lived W. E. B. Du Bois as well as E. Simms Campbell, the cartoonist. Nearby was Dan Burley, a black journalist and a boogie-woogie piano player. Hughes recalled the excitement of those days: ‘Artists and writers were always running into each other on Sugar Hill and talking over their problems and wondering how they could get’ fellowships and grants from benevolent organizations. One evening, Hughes and six of his compatriots gathered in the Aaron Douglas apartment and decided to start a literary magazine,‘the better to express ourselves freely and independently – without interference from old heads, white or Negro.’ From that initial discussion at 409 Edgecombe came Fire in its one and only issue of November 1926. Two years later, some of the same persons began another literary magazine, this time called Harlem.
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References
1 ’The Twenties: Harlem and Its Negritude’, African Forum, I (Spring, 1966), 18–19.Google Scholar
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4 Huggins, , pp. 169, 240–1Google Scholar. John W. Blassingame called the Huggins study ‘hardly definitive’, saying that Harlem Renaissance ‘ignores the internal dynamics of the black community which fostered and nurtured the movement’. Blassingame concluded that there still exists undiscovered ‘a different kind of renaissance than that which Huggins found’. See Blassingame, John W., ‘The Afro-Americans: Mythology to Reality’, in The Reinterpretation of American History and Culture, ed. Cartwright, William H. and Watson, Richard L. Jr, (Washington, D.C.: National Council for the Social Studies, 1973), p. 69.Google Scholar
5 With the exception of the last two numbers of Black Opals, the Moorland-Spingarn Research Center of Howard University holds copies of the extant issues of these journals. Our thanks go to the Research Center for the use of these increasingly rare copies.
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34 Abby Johnson wishes to acknowledge the support she has received from the Faculty Research Program at Howard University.
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