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  1. 5 de jun. de 2024 · Alain Locke (born September 13, 1885, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.—died June 9, 1954, New York City) was an American educator, writer, and philosopher, best remembered as the leader and chief interpreter of the Harlem Renaissance. Locke graduated in philosophy from Harvard University in 1907.

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  2. 29 de mai. de 2024 · On March 17, I visited the exhibition The Harlem Renaissance and Transatlantic Modernism at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where I was reminded that Locke is considered one of the chief intellectual forces behind the movement and era known as the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and 30s.

  3. 4 de jun. de 2024 · Alain Locke is the father of the Harlem Renaissance, which is also known as the New Negro Movement. He penned a seminal 1925 essay, “The New Negro” and published an anthology titled, The New Negro: An Interpretation featuring several notable writers, including Langston Hughes, Countee Cullen, Zora Neale Hurston, Jean Toomer, and ...

  4. 14 de jun. de 2024 · That issue, edited by the philosopher Alain Locke, contained sociological and historical articles by Black academics along with poetry by the likes of Hughes and Jean Toomer.

  5. 18 de jun. de 2024 · In 1925, Alain Locke edited a special number of Survey Graphic entitled “Harlem: Mecca of the New Negro,” which served both to codify and to launch a second New Negro literary movement. But Locke’s New Negro served even more than this: it transformed the militancy associated with the trope and translated this into an apolitical ...

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  6. 19 de jun. de 2024 · It was there that Alain Locke held some planning meetings for the special issue of the Survey Graphic magazine that later grew into his landmark 1925 anthology “The New Negro.”

  7. 4 de jun. de 2024 · In a popular publication, “The Black 100,” Alain Locke ranks as the 36th most influential African American ever, past or present. Distinguished as the first African American Rhodes Scholar in 1907, Locke was the philosophical architect—the acknowledged “Dean”—of the Harlem Renaissance, a period of cultural effervescence ...