Instructional Video2:30
Curated Video

The Harlem Cultural Festival: Summer of Soul

9th - Higher Ed
The Harlem Cultural Festival, also known as the Black Woodstock, was a watershed moment for Black culture in America that history almost forgot.
Instructional Video3:32
PBS

Public Reaction to Their Eyes Were Watching God

9th - 12th Standards
While white literary critics praised her work, the black literary establishment trashed Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God. See what other writers have to say about the novel in a short video from the PBS Masters series.
Instructional Video6:54
PBS

Documenting Rural Southern Black Culture

9th - 12th Standards
"Sweet Speech," the vernacular of southern blacks that Zora Neale Hurston captures in her novel, Their Eyes Were Watching God, is the subject of a resource from the PBS American Masters series. An anthropologist, Hurston drew on her...
Instructional Video11:22
PBS

Their Eyes Were Watching God

9th - 12th Standards
Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God is the subject of a Crash Course Literature episode narrated by John Green. Here, Green shares the critical reactions to the novel as well as his own thoughts about its importance.
Instructional Video2:20
PBS

Resurrecting Zora Neale Hurston | American Masters: Alice Walker

9th - 12th Standards
Zora Neale Hurston, her life, her work as an anthropologist recording the customs and speech of southern Black people, and her novels would have remained largely ignored if not for the efforts of Alice Walker. An American Masters video...
Instructional Video12:11
1
1
Crash Course

The Harlem Renaissance: Crash Course Theater #41

9th - 12th Standards
Artists shattered stereotypes during the Harlem Renaissance. Video 41 on the Crash Course Drama and Theater playlist describes art and theater during the time period with a focus on Broadway plays and musicals written by...
Instructional Video3:33
Biography

Langston Hughes- Mini Biography

8th - 12th Standards
When delving into such writings as "I Too Sing America" or "The Negro Speaks of Rivers" by poet, novelist, and playwright Langston Hughes, don't forget to provide this important historical background information on the Harlem...
Instructional Video12:29
TED-Ed

How Art Gives Shape to Cultural Change

9th - 12th Standards
"Can a museum be a catalyst in a community? Can a museum house artists and allow them to be change agents as communities re-think themselves?" Watch as curator Thelma Golden re-imagines the museum as a think tank and explores the...
Instructional Video
Crash Course

Crash Course Theater #41: The Harlem Renaissance

9th - 10th
Investigate how a neighborhood called Harlem in the 1920s was having a renaissance of arts. Learn about how writers like Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston were writing plays, and their African American theater companies were drawing...