digestdot.com digestdot.com
Search:    Site Home -> About Us -> Security & Privacy -> ToS -> Add Url -> Submit Article   
Add Url
 

Property & Estate

Education & Learning

Automotive

Online & Indoor Games

Culture & Art

Jobs & Careers

Finance & Banking

Society & Communities

Eating & Drinking

Home Family & Garden

Online Shopping

Relationship & Lifestyle

Sports

Teens & Kids

Science & Research

Issues & News

Travel & Accommodation

Self Management

Entertainment

Law & Politics

Medical Care

Health & Hygiene

Internet & Computers

Business & Services

 

  Site Home » Issues & News » Humanities & Arts
   
 

The Romantic Spirit of the Harlem Renaissance: Wallace Thurman

   

In Wallace Thurmans short life and short artistic career, one can discern tragic circumstances even more devastating than those of Hurston. Thurman (19021934) was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, and attended the University of California (Ferguson 729). He tried to create a literary movement in California like the one in Harlem through his establishment of Outlet, a "magazine similar to those being published" in Harlem (Ferguson 729). After the journal's failure within six months, Thurman moved to Harlem in 1925, where he continued his artistic career in various forms: novelist, editor, poet, playwright, and literary critic (Ferguson 729).

Thurman's dream was to "become editor of a financially secure magazine" (Henderson 150). He worked at several magazines in New York before becoming involved with Hughes, Hurston, and others to launch the journal Fire!! (1926), which was to stand in opposition to the mainly political and propagandist magazines being published currently: The Crisis, Opportunity, and The Messenger. Fire!! folded after one issue, leaving Thurman with a thousand dollar debt it took him four years to pay back (Ferguson 730). Thurman started another magazine in 1928, Harlem, A Forum of Negro Life; this journal had a longer life than Fire!! but it failed also (Ferguson 730).

Thurman then turned his talents to writing novels. His first novel, The Blacker the Berry (1929), contains "a variety of controversial themes including homosexuality, intraracial prejudice, abortion, and ethnic conflict between African Americans and Caribbean Americans" (Ferguson 730). His second novel, Infants of the Spring (1932), is a satiric evaluation of the Harlem Renaissance and the "judgment rendered is harsh and unsparing" (Ferguson 730). A third novel, written in collaboration with Abraham L. Furman, The Interne (1932) is "an expose of unethical behavior at City Hospital on Welfare Island (now Roosevelt Island)" (Ferguson 730). Ironically, City Hospital would be where Thurman would spend the last six months of his life just two years later.

Despite his literary successes and his being considered "spokesman for the younger group of black Renaissance writers," Thurman was prone to bouts of depression and "self-hatred" (Henderson 167). Thurman's "erotic, bohemian" lifestyle (as he described it) and excessive alcohol consumption wreaked havoc on his none too healthy body (Henderson 147). He died on December 22, 1934 at the age of 32. Thurman's friend, Arna Bontemps, described Thurman as: "He was like a flame which burned so intensely, it could not last for long, but quickly consumed itself" (Henderson 147).

Bontemps' description of Thurman could just as easily be seen as a description of the Harlem Renaissance itself. While African American literature and art existed before the Renaissance and continued after the Renaissance, during this period of time the nation's attention was riveted on those several streets in New York City. Whether this attention by the white community was good or bad is a complex issue. Many white people were genuinely interested in the folk and modern culture of African Americans, but it is also true that many of them were only thrill-seekers. But however that may be, the legacy of the Harlem Renaissance still continues to intrigue modern America. It is an important part of our history and culture, both black and white. Many of the issues and themes explored by the Harlem writers, (a search for identity, crossing boundaries, desire and loss, repression and rebellion, nostalgia, etc) are inherent in all cultures, and thus is something everyone can identify with. In the end, the Harlem Renaissance succeeded in transcending racial barriers.

Bibilography

Ferguson, SallyAnn H. "Wallace Thurman." The Oxford Companion to African American Literature. Eds. William L. Andrews, Frances Smith Foster, and Trudier Harris. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997. 729-30.

Henderson, Mae Gwendolyn. "Portrait of Wallace Thurman." The Harlem Renaissance Remembered. Ed. Arna Bontemps. New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1972. 147-170.

Author: Mary Arnold
 
Author Bio:
Mary Arnold is a popular columnist. Mary likes to pen down articles about this area.
This article can be searched using: art & humanities news, arts & humanities, humanities social sciences, society news, art news
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Peter Agostini - Artist of Exquisite Influence
 
The Empire Has No Name
 
The Biblical Signs of the Messiah's Arrival Just Occurred.
 
The Tammy Effect
 
An American In Europe: Why Do They Hate Us ?
 
All About News
 
Should Prisons Have Color Televisions?
 
Technology Can Lose Sight of the Goal
 
Were Dubya's Inane Responses Presidential or Deliberately Engineered Non Sequitors?
 
How To Reduce My Addiction To Foreign Oil
 
 
 
 
 

Tropical Depression Alberto and Tropical Cyclone Boloetse

We all wish we could forget the record breaking, costly and deadly 2005 Atlantic Tropical Hurricane ... - Lance Winslow
 

The Importance of a Background Check

This true story illustrates the need for better and deeper background checks. In this instance, the ... - Sue Edwards
 

Internet Streaming Media and Radio

As with many things in the world today media is transitioning to the internet. You can now get News ... - Paul Philbeck
 
 

Stories of Leith Links

Leith links is a park area in Leith, Edinburgh and was the original home of Golf in Scotland. In fac ... - John Arthur
 

The Shot Heard 'Round the World Was Not a Government Operation: Reboot America

Americans have the answers. All we need to do is ask the right questions. What we did once we can do ... - Melinda Pillsbury-Foster
 
 
Site Home -> Security & Privacy -> ToS
© 2006-2008 www.digestdot.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.