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Negro life in New York's Harlem

Chapter 13: Transcriber’s note
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About This Book

A lively, descriptive essay maps the neighborhood’s streets, avenues, and housing while portraying the complex social fabric of its roughly two hundred thousand residents from diverse backgrounds. It contrasts prosperous blocks and slums, traces daily street life and the rhythms of churches, theaters, clubs, and nightlife, and surveys amusements, rent parties, and local journalism. The author explores cultural energy and emerging identities associated with the New Negro movement while acknowledging economic pressures, overcrowding, and social tensions that shape community life and its role as a cultural focal point.

Transcriber’s note

Minor punctuation errors have been changed without notice. Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

The table of contents was corrected to match the chapter headers and their page numbers.

Spelling has been retained as originally published except for the corrections below.

Page 11: “the most artistocratic” “the most aristocratic”
Page 16: “the Carribean regions” “the Caribbean regions”
Page 18: “bitter antagonism existant” “bitter antagonism existent”