Get Even More Visitors To Your Blog, Upgrade To A Business Listing >>

She Was A Major Figure In The Harlem Renaissance, And She Was The First Black Graduate At Barnard College, Yet Despite Her Success, She Struggled With Poverty

Some of the best writers and authors are known for transporting us to different worlds and helping us see from different perspectives.

Zora Neale Hurston was a writer whose plays and short Stories written during the Harlem Renaissance accurately depicted and embraced Black culture in the 1920s and 30s.

Zora was born in Alabama in 1891. After she was born, her family relocated to Eatonville, Florida. After finishing high school, Zora earned her associate’s degree at Howard University in Washington D.C. and co-founded the school’s newspaper, The Hilltop.

In 1925, she went to the famous Barnard College in New York City on a scholarship and got a degree in anthropology. She was the college’s first Black graduate in 1928. While in college, she met influential writers Langston Hughes and Countee Cullen. The three of them ended up becoming major figures in the cultural Harlem Renaissance that took place in New York City throughout the 1920s and 30s.

Zora spent many years researching Black culture and history, traveling to countries like Jamaica and Haiti to further grasp African religion. She wrote about her travels and published her stories in several newspapers nationwide.

Zora also had a great talent for fiction and creative writing. While the short stories she wrote throughout the 1920s didn’t receive as much recognition as they deserved, a collection of them that was published after her death in 2020 serves as a vivid representation of African American folk culture.

One of Zora’s earliest books was published in 1935 and titled “Mules and Men,” which documented African-American folklore stories she collected throughout her journeys in the South. She also collaborated with Langston Hughes and co-wrote the play “Mule Bone,” which was written in 1930 and finally produced and staged in 1991.

Zora wrote more books throughout the late 1930s, one of them being her fiction novel, “Their Eyes Were Watching God,” which many consider her greatest work and one of the most influential stories written during the Harlem Renaissance.

Zora also had a passion for the performing arts and taught as a drama teacher at North Carolina College during her later years. Unfortunately, despite her success as a drama, Zora was often underpaid and struggled with living in poverty.

jonbilous – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only

Sign up for Chip Chick’s newsletter and get stories like this delivered straight to your inbox.

She entered the St. Lucie County Welfare Home in Florida as her health began to decline, and she couldn’t afford to take care of herself. She passed away in 1960 after suffering a stroke at 69.

Tragically, she was buried in an unmarked grave until novelist Alice Walker, famous for writing “The Color Purple,” found the grave and commissioned for there to be a marker with her name on it.

Although Zora may not have received as much recognition for her talent as a writer when she was still alive, her stories are very important to us today and give us a glimpse of what life was like for African Americans during the 20th century.

If true crime defines your free time, this is for you: join Chip Chick’s True Crime Tribe

In 2018, She Went Missing After Getting Her Hair And Nails Done, And 2 Weeks Later, Her Car Was Found Abandoned

Many Of Us Know About The Life Of Thomas Alva Edison, Who Invented Many Life-Changing Things Like The Incandescent Light Bulb, But Do You Know About His Wife?

One Simple Thing You Can Do To Live More Sustainably And Help Fight Climate Change Is To Start Composting

She Bought Her Dad $600 Concert Tickets As A Birthday Gift, But Her Dad Asked Her To Return Them, And She Feels Heartbroken

She Ditched Her Friend At A Mexican Restaurant After She Made A Big Scene Over Finding A Bay Leaf In Their Nachos

He’s Talking About When He Used To Use A Ouija Board In The Bronx And The Creepy Experiences He Had

His Adopted Parrot Has Been Insulting His In-Laws, And Now He’s Expected To Find His Parrot A New Home To Keep The Peace



This post first appeared on Page Not Found - Chip Chick, please read the originial post: here

Share the post

She Was A Major Figure In The Harlem Renaissance, And She Was The First Black Graduate At Barnard College, Yet Despite Her Success, She Struggled With Poverty

×

Subscribe to Page Not Found - Chip Chick

Get updates delivered right to your inbox!

Thank you for your subscription

×