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  1. 30 de nov. de 1987 · In it and its sequel, Banjo, McKay attempted to capture the vitality of the black vagabonds of urban America and Europe. Jake Brown, the protagonist of Home to Harlem, deserts the U.S. Army during World War I and lives in London until a race riot inspires him to return to Harlem. On his first night home he meets the prostitute Felice, for whom ...

    • Claude McKay
  2. Call 212.316.1636 for more information. "Home to Harlem" is the title of a book written by Claude McKay in 1928. Jake, the main character, couldn't wait to get home from W.W.I & experience the thrill of Harlem & “Them tantalizing brown legs”. Launched in 1997, HomeToHarlem.com was the first web site dedicated to the culture of the village ...

  3. McKay, a leading poet of the Harlem Renaissance, wanted to capture the intense spirit of vagabond blacks. Home to Harlem explores the notion of a distinctive identity for blacks. Lusty, raw characters are presented without judgement, and the full vibrancy of 1920's Harlem shines bright.

  4. Home to Harlem. Claude McKay. Northeastern University Press, 1987 - Fiction - 340 pages. A novel that gives voice to the alienation and frustration of urban blacks during an era when Harlem was in vogue.

  5. Set in the Harlem in the early 20th century, Home to Harlem tells of Jake Brown, a handsome black man and soldier in World War I. When he arrives to his theater of war, he is treated like a slave, not like a soldier, and so he defects to France. He starts back to home in Harlem as a cook aboard a vessel traveling to London, where he waits for ...

  6. Haunting rhythm, mingling of na'ive wist- » ) fulness and charming gayety, now sheering over into mad riotous joy, now, like a jungle mask, strange, unfamiliar, disturbing, now plunging headlong into the far, dim depths of profundity and rising out as suddenly with a simple, childish grin. And the white visitors laugh.

  7. Home to Harlem tells the story of the longshoreman Jake Brown who returns to Harlem in 1919 after having spent some. time in Europe as a soldier and later as a worker in a variety of odd. jobs. McKay's decision to focus his novel largely on working. class Blacks in Harlem after World War I certainly predetermines.