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Click to buy the Opportunity ReaderTitle:  The Opportunity Reader; Selections from the Urban League's Opportunity Magazine
(Click Title or Book to Order Online)

Author:  Modern Library, Sondra Kathryn Wilson (Editor), National Urban League
Publisher:  Random House, Incorporated
Date Published:  June 1999
Format:  Trade Paper

From Random House Incorporated
Modern Library Harlem Renaissance

In 1923, the Urban League's Opportunity magazine made its first appearance. Spearheaded by the noted sociologist Charles S. Johnson, it became, along with the N.A.A.C.P.'s Crisis magazine, one of the vehicles that drove the art and literature of the Harlem Renaissance. As a way of attracting writers such as Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, Johnson conducted literary contests that were largely funded by Casper Holstein, the infamous Harlem numbers gangster, who contributed
several essays in addition to money.

Dorothy West, Nella Larsen, and Arthur Schomburg were among Opportunity's contributors. Many of the pieces included in The Opportunity Reader have not been seen since their publication in the magazine, whose motto was "Not alms, but opportunity."

The fertile artistic period now known as the Harlem Renaissance (1920-1930) gave birth to many of the world-renowned masters of black literature and is the model for today's renaissance of black writers.

 

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AALBC.com's Harlem Renaissance Author Profiles Page

 










 


 

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