Monday, May 3, 2010

Introduction and Directions

Introduction: The Harlem Renaissance was an African-American artistic movement that occurred in the years between WWI and The Great Depression.  This social movement was spurred by a large-scale migration of African-Americans from rural areas in the South to cities in the North.  Your task is to carefully examine a series of websites pertaining to the Harlem Renaissance and explore the characteristics, qualities, and people that impacted the Harlem Renaissance. 

Directions: Webquest will teach you how to acquire information about the Harlem Renaissance from informative websites and apply this new knowledge in the creation of documentaries that demonstrate your learning on the subject.  Go first to the "Links and Scaffolding Questions" post and click on each link.  Then, individually answer the scaffolding questions for each website that is linked.  Scaffolds help construction workers reach higher levels of tall buildings and, in a similar way, scaffolding questions should help you reach higher levels of understanding of the topic being discussed.  Notice that there are four different categories of websites, Dance, Music, Literature, and Art of the Harlem Renaissance.  Take special care to answer the questions carefully because the answers to these questions will be the foundation to the documentary videos you will create in groups.  The "Documentary Video" post will explain that aspect of the webquest, this video will be the final part of the webquest and a culmination of everything that you have learned.

Links and Scaffolding Questions

Category 1: Art of the Harlem Renaissance
- During the time period, the social movement we now call the Harlem Renaissance was called the "New Negro Movement" why do you think this name was recognized as appropriate? 


- Consider the changes in America between the end of the Civil War and the start of WW II, why is it that many African-Americans were actively trying to define what it meant to be both "African" and "American"?


http://www.pbs.org/newshour/forum/february98/harlem3.html

 - This website has several Harlem Renaissance experts that try to answer the question "The art of the Harlem Renaissance seems overwhelmingly optimistic, despite the fact that Harlem   was already in a state of economic decline and many African-American performers were not embraced by mainstream America. Why?"  Read the answers the experts provide and describe in your own words why you think Harlem Renaissance Art was so often optimistic rather than pessimistic.


 -Imagine yourself as an African-American living in Harlem during this era.  Do you think you would be excited and optimistic despite the many challenges you would experience?






http://www.columbia.edu/itc/history/odonnell/w1010/edit/migration/migration.html


 - This website includes images of all 60 panel paintings that Jacob Lawrence did to document the Great Migration.  Why do you think Lawrence chose this subject for his big project?


 - What themes and trends do you notice that reoccur throughout the paintings?


 - Choose one panel painting, describe how the painting relates to specific things that you know about American History.


http://www.ackland.org/art/collection/contemporary/58.1.2801.htmlhttp://www.artic.edu/artaccess/AA_AfAm/pages/AfAm_6.shtml

 - The two above websites show and describe two different paintings done by the same artist, Archibald J. Motley Jr, about 15 years apart.  Why do you think the subject matter and style of his art changed so much?

- Which of the two paintings do you like the most, why?

- Do you think art today is reflective of people's experiences, if so, how? Please give specific examples.

Category 2: Literature of the Harlem Renaissance


http://www.jcu.edu/harlem/Literature/Page_1.htm

--What were some significant characteristics of the literary movement during the Harlem Renaissance, and how are they reflective of the culture of the period?



--Describe the transformation from the "Old Negro" to the "New Negro".  Which significant works/writers during the Harlem Renaissance would you say influenced or contributed to this transformation?


http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A32779164

-- How was Hughes poetry different than any other poetry of the time?  Read the excerpt of the poem The Weary Blues.  How is this poem Jazz poetry?


-- Why did Hughes feel like he slept in "ten thousand beds?"  Do you think his childhood effected his poetry?

http://www.americanwriters.org/writers/hughes_hurston.asp


--How do you think Hughes' background - his education, his extensive travels, etc - influenced his works, and their often political nature?



-- How did Hurston's academic background influence her literary works, and why is that important in terms of the Harlem Renaissance?


http://artsedge.kennedy-center.org/exploring/harlem/themes/writers.html

-- Who were the "Talented Tenth?"  What were they trying to do?  What did their campaign do?


-- What was the 'representative' African American?  What did Hughes' "The Negro and the Racial Mountain" argue about these writings?  

Category 3: Music of the Harlem Renaissance

-- Where was Jazz first documented? What is it a fusion of?


-- Listen to Fat Waller's Minor Drag.  What do you think of Jazz?  Have you ever listened to Jazz before?  Why do you think it became so popular so quickly?

http://www.1920s-fashion-and-music.com/Harlem-Renaissance-music.html


-- Who did the "Harlem Stride Style" of piano helped bridge?  Why were these groups separating before they were bridged together with this music? 



-- What were some venues that were perfect to play Jazz at?



http://www.jcu.edu/harlem/Performers/blues.htm

-- What was the first recorded Blues song? By who? Who else was a popular Jazz singer?


-- What were "Race Record" labels?  What did they do?



http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/fight/peopleevents/e_harlem.html

-- What helped to popularize Jazz?  Why do you think this increased the popularity of Jazz?


-- Who was Duke Ellington?  What was his contribution to the Harlem Renaissance? 


Category 4 Dance of the Harlem Renaissance


--What were "rent parties" and what role did they play in the lives of people living in Harlem during this period?  How did they define the culture of Harlem and of the Harlem Renaissance?


--What were some popular social dances during the Harlem Renaissance?  In what ways do these dances reflect the culture of the Harlem Renaissance?




--Most styles of music and dance durin the Harlem Renaissance was highly improvisational.  Why do you think that is?


--Why was the Lindy Hop so popular?  How were dances like this used as a form of cultural and personal expression?


--Can you think of popular dances today that are used as forms of expression?




--What exactly was "Jazz dance" and what kinds of dance forms did it influence?


--What remnants of Jazz dance can you think of today?  How do you think the culture of African-American dance forms has evolved into the dance forms we know today?



http://www.pbs.org/wnet/freetodance/index.html
 --In what ways was the African-American dance culture of the Harlem Renaissance a response to the negative history of minstrelsy?
 

--Who were some of the "Pioneers" of African-American dance during the Harlem Renaissance?  How did their work during this period help to recreate the public image of African-American culture?

Documentary Video

Now is time for the fun part!  Your probably have a personal preference or particular interest in one of the four categories introduced in the Links and Scaffolding Questions section.  Though you were required to look at the links and answer questions for all four categories.  You now have an opportunity to choose which of the four categories you would like to participate in creating a documentary video.  Look at the links below for information on the basics of using a Flip Camcorder (one will be provided for each group to use), creating a documentary and some examples of short documentaries.  How your group chooses to design your documentary is completely up to you! Creativity, personal interpretations, and using your previous understandings of history are encouraged.  You will be graded on the degree to which you have brought together the information from the websites linked in the webquest, degree of organization, and original conclusions. 

Basics of the Flip Camera: http://www.lps.org/post/detail.cfm?id=2318

Basics of Documentary Film Making (Pay close attention to the 7 steps to completing your documentary): http://www.freshbrain.org/activity/make-a-documentary-video

Examples of simple documentaries:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFVmdEcNBNE -Guy Ritchie Documentary

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amXsPcD7g5g - Mystery At Coral Castle

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0hFLz8dhuyE - Pugs: A Short Documentary