I recounted some details on the life of Claude McKay in this post from four years ago. But this year, on the centennial of Harlem Shadows, seemed like a good time to sample the work of this major figure of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s.
In this title poem from the volume, McKay evokes the plight of Harlem prostitutes. They ply their trade under the worst possible weather conditions. (I can't read about that "snow-flake" without a shudder.) They are only “girls,” compelled to take up degrading work (in the prior stanza, to “bend and barter at desire’s call”) on desolate streets.
Though McKay evokes a larger “stern harsh world” responsible for their condition, the “poverty, dishonor and disgrace” they experience really come at the hands of a prejudiced white society.
In its vivid picture of
sex workers in the inner city, this poem reminded me of “Buy and Sell,” a
melancholy song from Laura Nyro’s debut album. I don’t know if she read any
McKay growing up, but I would not be surprised, because she absorbed so many
lyrical and musical influences. But the works of both are individual and
unforgettable.
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