Digital Story References Images Source Citation Motley, Archibald. Nightlife. 1943. Smithsonian Magazine. Painting. 17 Apr 2012. Description People dancing and drinking in a speakeasy. Palmer, Hayden. Jeunesse. 1927. Art Lex. Painting. 17 Apr 2012. A couple dancing in a merging scene of black and white Douglas, Aaron. Idylls of the Deep South. 1934. Eyecon Art. Painting. 17 Apr 2012. The jobs of African Americans in the south Johnson, William. Street Music. 1939. Smithsonian American Art Museum. Painting. 17 Apr 2012. Two musicians playing the guitar on the street Motley, Archibald. Blues. 1929. Painting. Flickr. Web. 19 April 2012. African Americans dancing and playing instruments and being free Bearden, Romare. Jammin’ At The Juvoy. 1920. Painting. The Studio Museum In Harlem. Web. 17 Apr. 2012. The different possibilities of African Americans Johnson, Malvin Gray. Negro Solider. 1934. Oil on Canvas. Oklahoma City Art Musuem. 17 Apr 2012. Music “Take the A Train” Source Citation Ellington, Duke. “Take the A Train.” Billy Strayhorn. Take the A Train. Prime Cuts, 1941. MP3. “It Don’t Mean a Thing if it Ain’t Got That Ellington, Duke. “It Don’t Mean a Thing if it Swing” Ain’t Got That Swing.” It Don’t Mean a Thing if it Ain’t Got That Swing. Brunswick Records, 1932. MP3. “What a Wonderful World” Armstrong, Louis. “What a Wonderful World.” What a Wonderful World. Warner/Chapell Music, Inc., 1968. MP3. “Ooh Lawdy My Baby” Cox, Ida. “Ooh Lawdy My Baby.” Papa Lawdy Jackson. Lawdy, Lawdy Blues. 1923. MP3. “Blue Skies” Baker, Josephine. “Blue Skies.” Completed Recorded Works. Harper Collins, 1927. MP3. Text Source Citation African American solider in uniform Description Jazz, 4:40 Jazz, 3:13 Jazz, 3:14 Blues, 2:04 Jazz, 2:58 Description “Juke Box Love Song” “A Song” “Blood Burning Moon” “The Blind Man and the Elephant” The Harlem Renaissance in Black and White “The Political Plays of Langston Hughes” “Harlem Renaissance” “The Harlem Renaissance: Zora Neale Hurston’s First Story” “The Negro Speaks of Rivers” “Harlem” Langston, Hughes. “Juke Box Love Song.” New York City: Harold Over Associates, 1997. Print. Reese, Lizette Woodworth. “A Song.” Poetry Foundation. Web. 17 Apr 2012 Phillips, Jane. “Blood Burning Moon.” Short Stories for Students. Detroit: Gale, 2002. Literature Resource Center. Web. 17 Apr 2012. Baldwin, James. “The Blind Men and the Elephant.” Juliet Sutherland. Web. 17 Apr 2012. Hutchinson, George. The Harlem Renaissance in Black and White. Cambridge: Belknap Press, 1997. Print. Nadler, Paul. “The Political Plays of Langston Hughes.” Theatre History Studies. Detroit: Gale, 2001. Literature Resource Center. Web. 17 Apr 2012. “Harlem Renaissance” Detroit: Gale, 1995. Literature Resource Center. Web. 18 Apr 2012. “The Harlem Renaissance: Zora Neale Hurston’s First Story.” History Matters. New York: 1925. The U.S. Survey Course. Web. 17 Apr 2012. Hughes, Langston. “The Negro Speaks of Rivers.” Poetry X. Ed. Jough Dempsey. 29 Aug 2005. 17 Apr 2012. Poem Hughes, Langston. “Harlem.” Collected Poems. Web. 17 Apr 2012. Poem Poem Criticism article Short story Historical analysis of primary sources Criticism article Criticism article Criticism article Poem “The Biography of Abraham Lincoln” Lincoln, Abraham. “The Biography of Abraham Lincoln.” The Biography Channel. 2011. 01 March 2011. Hughes, Langston. “I, Too, Sing America.” Poem Hunter. 3 January 2003. Web. 17 Apr 20. Biography “Thank You, Ma’am” Hughes, Langston. “Thank You, Ma'am.” Creative Education, 1991. Print. Short story “Beyond the Harlem Renaissance: The Case for Black Modernist Writers” Smith, Bonnie. “Beyond the Harlem Criticism article Renaissance: The Case for Black Modernist Writers.” Modern Language Studies. Vol. 3. Cleveland State University. 1935. Print. Video and Film “The Harlem Renaissance” Source Citation The History Channel. “The Harlem Renaissance.” 2012. Web. Wormser, Richard. “The Harlem Renaissance.” PBS. 2002. Web. Murphy, Eddie. Harlem Nights. Richard Pryor. Paramount, 1989. VHS. “I, Too, Sing America” “The Harlem Renaissance” Harlem Nights “The Harlem Renaissance” “Cora Unashamed” A&E. “The Harlem Renaissance.” 1996. Web. Hughes, Langston. “Cora Unashamed.” From The Ways of White Folks. Vintage Classics Edition, 1990. Poem Description Background information, 8:58 Background information Film, Students can also use the trailer that we can zamzar from YouTube. Background information Short story in video