Answer:
Harlem Renaissance
Step-by-step explanation:
The Harlem Renaissance was the rebirth of black art in the community of African-Americans living in Harlem, New York during the 1920s. In the early 1920s three key works showed the new African-American literary creativity. Harlem Shadows (1922) by Claude McKay, became one of the first African-American works published by a major national publishing house. Cane (1923), by Jean Toomer, is an experimental novel that combines poetry and prose to show southern and urban rural life in the north of American blacks. Finally, Confusion (1924), the first novel by Jessie Fauset, represents the life of the African-American middle class from the point of view of a woman.