WCSU instructor Lionel Bascom corrects perceptions about Harlem Renaissance with new book

Although much has been reported on the Harlem Renaissance, Lionel Bascom, instructor in the department of Writing, Linguistics and Creative Process at Western Connecticut State University, suspected there was more to the movement than has been revealed.

He decided to write a book about the period, “Harlem: The Crucible of Modern African American Culture,” and found that not only did the flowering of African-American literature and music endure much longer than is widely documented, it lasted long enough to change his own life.

“When you read about the Harlem Renaissance you believe it is a brief period where Harlem art scenes flourished until it disappeared in 1929,” Bascom said. “I wondered, ‘Why 1929?’ I didn’t believe that number. No one seems to know when the Harlem Renaissance began. No one used the phrase ‘Harlem Renaissance’ until the ’40s. In the ’20s and ’30s no one wrote about this thing called the Harlem Renaissance.”

While the specific dates aren’t important, what happened during the Harlem Renaissance was, because much of black culture in the United States was forged there.

And although the Great Depression caused patrons from Midtown Manhattan to stop traveling uptown to Harlem for the famous music and culture, which caused many clubs and theaters to close, black intellectuals and artists like Ralph Ellison, Langston Hughes and James Baldwin continued to work there.

With many others, they found sustenance in Harlem that was rare in other parts of the country, and even though factions developed and a new guard eventually rejected the old guard, enough people worked together to foment a national movement.

Much of the legal attack on southern segregation, for instance, was devised in Harlem by Thurgood Marshall and other leaders of the NAACP and the Urban League. Then, when leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. called for a march on Washington in 1962, a 16-year-old Bascom, who was the president of the Danbury NAACP Youth Group, answered the call.

“We got on a train in Danbury and didn’t have to get off,” Bascom recalled. “Sometimes we were going backwards, sometimes we were going forward, but that car we got on in Danbury brought us to Washington. When we got there, churches and organizations put us up. Howard University opened its dorms. We were only there overnight. They had water stations with buckets of water that we dipped our cups into — there was no bottled water. There were plenty of sandwiches and dinners at the churches, though. We left at 7 p.m. after the speeches, then came back to Danbury.”

Bascom spent weekends in Danbury with his parents and went to high school in Brooklyn, where his grandparents and brother lived. He shined shoes at his brother’s barbershop for tips and learned his way around New York.

“Harlem was always a special place for me,” he said.

By then, Harlem was not the same vibrant source of new and radical ideas that it had been in the 1940s and ’50s, with factions and distrust developing.

As Bascom recounted, one break started after railroad porters, “who were among the most respected blacks in America,” unionized and threatened to strike the Pullman Car Company. Negotiations stalled and A. Philip Randolph, a labor and civil rights leader, organized a march on Washington. D.C., that promised to bring 10,000 people to the city who would “stay until something happened.”

President Franklin Roosevelt called Randolph the day before the march and asked what could be done to stop the protest. Negotiations led to Roosevelt issuing an executive order that for the first time opened all federal contracts to black-owned companies.

Many saw it as a great victory, and it was a step toward later integration of the military by Harry Truman, but some regarded Randolph as a sell-out who should have negotiated for bigger reforms.

Similar arguments simmered between writers and political thinkers of different generations who were divided about how quickly to push their ideas. Bascom wrote that a new guard of black leadership came to be known as “the New Negroes,” who openly campaigned against racism and segregation. One of them was Marcus Garvey, a Black Nationalist who traveled around the country gathering raucous crowds with his sermon-like message. One member of the audience in Nebraska was a youngster named Malcom Little, who later became Malcolm X, a leader of the Nation of Islam.

Malcolm X drew large crowds, too, when he spoke in Harlem in the 1960s, a continuing example of the social imprint the New York neighborhood exerted on the U.S., even after the jazz clubs of the “Harlem Renaissance” closed.

“I thought this book was necessary because I wanted to say that when the music stopped playing, these people in Harlem were working toward justice,” Bascom said. “It was a coming together of progressives who said, ‘We have got to change.’ ”

Bascom’s book is available at the publisher’s website and at bookstores.

For more information, call the Office of University Relations at (203) 837-8486.

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Submitted by Danbury, CT

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