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Alain LeRoy Locke

Alain LeRoy Locke (September 13, 1885 – June 9, 1954) was an American writer, philosopher, educator, and patron of the arts. Distinguished in 1907 as the first African-American Rhodes Scholar, Locke became known as the philosophical architect —the acknowledged "Dean"— of the Harlem Renaissance.[2] He is frequently included in listings of influential African Americans. On March 19, 1968, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. proclaimed: "We're going to let our children know that the only philosophers that lived were not Plato and Aristotle, but W. E. B. Du Bois and Alain Locke came through the universe."[3]

Alain LeRoy Locke
Locke circa 1946
BornArthur Leroy Locke[1]
(1885-09-13)September 13, 1885
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DiedJune 9, 1954(1954-06-09) (aged 68)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Resting placeCongressional Cemetery
OccupationWriter, philosopher, educator, and patron of the arts
LanguageEnglish
EducationCentral High School (Philadelphia)
Harvard University
Hertford College, Oxford
Humboldt University of Berlin
Official nameAlain Leroy Locke (1886–1954)
TypeCity
CriteriaAfrican American, Education, Professions & Vocations, Writers
Designated1991
Location2221 S 5th St., Philadelphia
39°55′14″N 75°09′20″W / 39.92065°N 75.15545°W / 39.92065; -75.15545

Early life and education

 
Alain LeRoy Locke, c.1907

He was born Arthur Leroy Locke in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on September 13, 1885,[4] to parents Pliny Ishmael Locke (1850–1892) and Mary (née Hawkins) Locke (1853–1922), both of whom were descended from prominent families of free blacks. Called "Roy" as a boy, he was their only child. His father was the first black employee of the U.S. Postal Service, and his paternal grandfather taught at Philadelphia's Institute for Colored Youth. His mother Mary was a teacher and inspired Locke's passion for education and literature. Mary's grandfather, Charles Shorter, fought as a soldier and was a hero in the War of 1812.[2][5]

At the age of 16, Locke chose to use the first name of "Alain".[4] In 1902, Locke graduated from Central High School in Philadelphia, second in his 107th class in the academic institution. He also attended Philadelphia School of Pedagogy.[6]

In 1907, Locke graduated from Harvard University with degrees in English and philosophy; he was honored as a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society and recipient of the Bowdoin prize.[7] That year he was the first African American to be selected as a Rhodes Scholar to the University of Oxford (and the last to be selected until 1963, when John Edgar Wideman and John Stanley Sanders, a future notable writer and politician, respectively, were selected). In the early 20th century, Rhodes selectors did not meet candidates in person, but there is evidence that at least some selectors knew that Locke was African-American.[8] On arriving at Oxford, Locke was denied admission to several colleges. Several American Rhodes Scholars from the South refused to live in the same college or attend events with Locke.[7][8] He was finally admitted to Hertford College, where he studied literature, philosophy, Greek, and Latin, from 1907–1910. Alongside his friend and fellow student Pixley ka Isaka Seme, he was part of the Oxford Cosmopolitan Club, contributing to its first publication.[9]

In 1910, he attended the University of Berlin, where he studied philosophy.

Locke wrote from Oxford in 1910 that the "primary aim and obligation" of a Rhodes Scholar

"is to acquire at Oxford and abroad generally a liberal education, and to continue subsequently the Rhodes mission [of international understanding] throughout life and in his own country. If once more it should prove impossible for nations to understand one another as nations, then, as Goethe said, they must learn to tolerate each other as individuals".[10][11][12]

Teaching and scholarship

Locke received an assistant professorship in English at Howard University in 1912.[13] While at Howard, he became a member of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity.

Locke returned to Harvard in 1916 to work on his doctoral dissertation, The Problem of Classification in the Theory of Value. In his thesis, he discusses the causes of opinions and social biases, and that these are not objectively true or false, and therefore not universal. Locke received his PhD in philosophy in 1918.

Locke returned to Howard University as the chair of the department of philosophy. During this period, he began teaching the first classes on race relations. After working to gain equal pay for African-American and white faculty at the university, he was dismissed in 1925.[14]

Following the appointment in 1926 of Mordecai W. Johnson, the first African-American president of Howard, Locke was reinstated in 1928 at the university. Beginning in 1935, he returned to philosophy as a topic of his writing.[15] He continued to teach generations of students at Howard until he retired in 1953. Locke Hall, on the Howard campus, is named in his honor. Among his prominent former students is actor Ossie Davis, who said that Locke encouraged him to go to Harlem because of his interest in theatre. And he did.

In addition to teaching philosophy, Locke promoted African-American artists, writers, and musicians. He encouraged them to explore Africa and its many cultures as inspiration for their works. He encouraged them to depict African and African-American subjects, and to draw on their history for subject material. The library resources built up by Dorothy B. Porter to support these studies included materials which he donated from his travels and contacts.[16]

Harlem Renaissance and the "New Negro"

Locke was the guest editor of the March 1925 issue of the periodical Survey Graphic, for a special edition titled "Harlem, Mecca of the New Negro": about Harlem and the Harlem Renaissance, which helped educate white readers about its flourishing culture.[17] In December of that year, he expanded the issue into The New Negro, a collection of writings by him and other African Americans, which would become one of his best-known works. A landmark in black literature (later acclaimed as the "first national book" of African America),[18] it was an instant success. Locke contributed five essays: the "Foreword", "The New Negro", "Negro Youth Speaks", "The Negro Spirituals", and "The Legacy of Ancestral Arts". This book established his reputation as "a leading African-American literary critic and aesthete."[15]

Locke's philosophy of the New Negro was grounded in the concept of race-building; that race is not merely an issue of heredity but is more an issue of society and culture.[19] He raised overall awareness of potential black equality; he said that no longer would blacks allow themselves to adjust or comply with unreasonable white requests. This idea was based on self-confidence and political awareness. Although in the past the laws regarding equality had been ignored without consequence by white America, Locke's philosophical idea of The New Negro allowed for fair treatment. Because this was an idea and not a law, people held its power. If they wanted this idea to flourish, they were the ones who would need to "enforce" it through their actions and overall points of view.

While his own writing was sophisticated philosophy, and therefore not popularly accessible, he mentored other writers in the movement who would become more broadly known, such as Zora Neale Hurston.[8] The "philosophical basis" of the Renaissance has since been widely recognized to originate from Locke.[20]

Feud with Albert C. Barnes

One author whose work Locke edited for both Survey Graphic as well as The New Negro was art collector, critic, and theorist Albert Barnes. Barnes and Locke were connected in their shared views on the importance of Negro art in America.[21] Barnes promulgated notions of the superiority of black art in terms of spirituality and emotion, owing to the collective suffering from which black artists draw to create their work.[21] Locke argued for the primacy of craft objects and the visual tradition as being the greatest contributor of black art to the American canon.[22] The commonalities between the two men's' stance on black art led Barnes to believe Locke was stealing his ideas, creating a rift between the two men.[21] Locke touches on his feud with Barnes in his book The Negro in Art.[22]

Religious beliefs

 

Locke identified himself as a Bahá'í throughout the last half of his life (1918-1954).[23] He declared his belief in Baháʼu'lláh in the year 1918. Due to the lack of an official enrollment system for the religion, the date when Locke converted to that faith is unverified.[24] However, the National Baháʼí Archives discovered a "Baháʼí Historical Record" card that Locke completed in 1935 for a Baháʼí census from the National Spiritual Assembly.[24] He was one of seven African-American members from the Washington, D.C. Baháʼí movement to complete the card.[24] On the card, Locke wrote the year 1918 as the year he was accepted into the Baháʼí religion, and wrote Washington, D.C., as the place he was accepted.[24] It was common to write to ʻAbdu'l-Bahá to declare one's new faith, and Locke received a letter, or "tablet", from ʻAbdu'l-Bahá in return.

When ʻAbdu'l-Bahá died in 1921, Locke enjoyed a close relationship with Shoghi Effendi, then head of the Baháʼí Faith. Shoghi Effendi is reported to have said to Locke, "People as you, Mr. Gregory, Dr. Esslemont and some other dear souls are as rare as diamond."[7] He is among some 40 African Americans known to have joined the religion during the ministry of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá before the leader's death in later 1921.[25]

Sexual orientation

Locke was homosexual, and may have encouraged and supported other gay African Americans who were part of the Harlem Renaissance.[26] Given the discriminatory laws against it, he was not fully open about his orientation.[8] He referred to it as a point of "vulnerable/invulnerability", representing an area of both risk and strength.[7]

Death, influence and legacy

After his retirement from Howard University in 1953, Locke moved to New York City.[27] He suffered from heart disease.[27] Following a six-week illness, he died at Mount Sinai Hospital on June 9, 1954.[28] During his illness, he was cared for by his friend and mentee, Margaret Just Butcher.[29][30]

Butcher used notes from Locke's unfinished work to write The Negro in American Culture (1956).[31]

Journey of ashes

Locke was cremated, and his remains given to Dr. Arthur Fauset, Locke's close friend and executor of his estate. He was an anthropologist who was a major figure in the Harlem Renaissance. After Fauset died in 1983, and the remains were given to his friend, Reverend Sadie Mitchell, who ministered at African Episcopal Church of St. Thomas in Philadelphia. Mitchell retained the ashes until the mid-1990s, when she asked Dr. J. Weldon Norris, a professor of music at Howard University, to take the ashes to the university.

The ashes were held at Howard University's Moorland–Spingarn Research Center until 2007. That year they were discovered when two former Rhodes scholars were working on the Centennial of Locke's selection as a Rhodes Scholar. Concerned that the human remains were not properly cared for, the university transferred them to its W. Montague Cobb Research Laboratory, which had extensive experience handling human remains (and had worked on those from the African Burying Ground in New York). Locke's ashes, which had been stored in a plain paper bag in a simple round metal container, were transferred to a small funerary urn and locked in a safe.[8]

Howard University officials initially considered having Locke's ashes buried in a niche at Locke Hall on the Howard campus, as Langston Hughes's ashes had been interred in 1991 at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York City. But Kurt Schmoke, the university's legal counsel, was concerned about setting a precedent that might lead to too many people trying to gain burials at the university. After reviewing legal issues, university officials decided to bury the remains off-site. They thought to bury Locke beside his mother, Mary Hawkins Locke. But Howard officials quickly discovered a problem: She had been interred at Columbian Harmony Cemetery in Washington, D.C., but that cemetery closed in 1959. Her remains and others from that cemetery were transferred to National Harmony Memorial Park. (She and 37,000 other unclaimed remains from Columbian Harmony were buried in a mass grave, with no markers.)[8]

University officials eventually decided to bury Alain Locke's remains at historic Congressional Cemetery in Washington, DC. Former African-American Rhodes Scholars raised $8,000 to purchase a burial plot there. Locke was interred at Congressional Cemetery on September 13, 2014. His tombstone reads:

1885–1954

Herald of the Harlem Renaissance

Exponent of Cultural Pluralism

On the back of the headstone is a nine-pointed Baháʼí star (representing Locke's religious beliefs); a Zimbabwe Bird, emblem of the nation Locke adopted as a Rhodes Scholar; a lambda, symbol of the gay rights movement; and the logo of Phi Beta Sigma, the fraternity Locke joined. In the center of these four symbols is an Art Deco representation of an African woman's face set against the rays of the sun. This image is a simplified version of the bookplate that Harlem Renaissance painter Aaron Douglas designed for Locke. Below the bookplate image are the words "Teneo te, Africa" ("I hold you, my Africa"). This represented Locke's belief that African Americans needed to study African culture to enlarge their sense of self.[8]

Influence, legacy and honors

Schools named after Locke include:

  • Alain L. Locke Elementary School PS 208 in South Harlem
  • The Locke High School in Los Angeles
  • The Alain Locke Public School, an elementary school in West Philadelphia
  • Alain Locke Charter Academy in Chicago
  • Alain Locke Elementary School in Gary, Indiana

Major works

 
First edition cover of The New Negro (1925)

In addition to the books listed below, Locke edited the "Bronze Booklet" series, a set of eight volumes published in the 1930s by Associates in Negro Folk Education. He regularly published reviews of poetry and literature by African Americans in journals such as Opportunity and Phylon. His works include:

  • The New Negro: An Interpretation. New York: Albert and Charles Boni, 1925.
  • Harlem: Mecca of the New Negro. Survey Graphic 6.6 (March 1, 1925).[37]
  • When Peoples Meet: A Study of Race and Culture Contacts. Alain Locke and Bernhard J. Stern (eds). New York: Committee on Workshops, Progressive Education Association, 1942.
  • The Philosophy of Alain Locke: Harlem Renaissance and Beyond. Edited by Leonard Harris. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1989.
  • Race Contacts and Interracial Relations: Lectures of the Theory and Practice of Race. Washington, D.C.: Howard University Press, 1916. Reprinted, edited by Jeffery C. Stewart. Washington: Howard University Press, 1992.
  • Negro Art Past and Present. Washington: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936 (Bronze Booklet No. 3).
  • The Negro and His Music. Washington: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936 (Bronze Booklet No. 2).
  • "The Negro in the Three Americas". Journal of Negro Education 14 (Winter 1944): 7–18.
  • "Negro Spirituals". Freedom: A Concert in Celebration of the 75th Anniversary of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States (1940). Compact disc. New York: Bridge, 2002. Audio (1:14).
  • "Spirituals" (1940). The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. Edited by Jeffrey C. Stewart. New York and London: Garland, 1983, pp. 123–26.
  • The New Negro: An Interpretation. New York: Arno Press, 1925.
  • Four Negro Poets. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1927.
  • Plays of Negro Life: a Source-Book of Native American Drama. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1927.
  • A Decade of Negro Self-Expression. Charlottesville, Virginia, 1928.
  • The Negro in America. Chicago: American Library Association, 1933.
  • Negro Art – Past and Present. Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936.
  • The Negro and His Music. Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1936; also New York: Kennikat Press, 1936.
  • The Negro in Art: A Pictorial Record of the Negro Artist and of the Negro Theme in Art. Washington, D.C.: Associates in Negro Folk Education, 1940; also New York: Hacker Art Books, 1940.
  • "A Collection of Congo Art". Arts 2 (February 1927): 60–70.
  • "Harlem: Dark Weather-vane". Survey Graphic 25 (August 1936): 457–462, 493–495.
  • "The Negro and the American Stage". Theatre Arts Monthly 10 (February 1926): 112–120.
  • "The Negro in Art". Christian Education 13 (November 1931): 210–220.
  • "Negro Speaks for Himself". The Survey 52 (April 15, 1924): 71–72.
  • "The Negro's Contribution to American Art and Literature". The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 140 (November 1928): 234–247.
  • "The Negro's Contribution to American Culture". Journal of Negro Education 8 (July 1939): 521–529.
  • "A Note on African Art". Opportunity 2 (May 1924): 134–138.
  • "Our Little Renaissance". Ebony and Topaz, edited by Charles S. Johnson. New York: National Urban League, 1927.
  • "Steps Towards the Negro Theatre". Crisis 25 (December 1922): 66–68.
  • The Problem of Classification in the Theory of Value: or an Outline of a Genetic System of Values. PhD dissertation: Harvard, 1917.
  • "Locke, Alain". [Autobiographical sketch.] Twentieth Century Authors. Edited by Stanley Kunitz and Howard Haycroft. New York: 1942, p. 837.
  • "The Negro Group". Group Relations and Group Antagonisms. Edited by Robert M. MacIver. New York: Institute for Religious Studies, 1943.
  • World View on Race and Democracy: A Study Guide in Human Group Relations. Chicago: American Library Association, 1943.
  • Le Rôle du nègre dans la culture des Amériques. Port-au-Prince: Haiti Imprimerie de l'état, 1943.
  • "Values and Imperatives". In Sidney Hook and Horace M. Kallen (eds), American Philosophy, Today and Tomorrow. New York: Lee Furman, 1935, pp. 312–33. Reprinted: Freeport, NY: Books for Libraries Press, 1968; Harris, The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 31–50.
  • "Pluralism and Ideological Peace". In Milton R. Konvitz and Sidney Hook (eds), Freedom and Experience: Essays Presented to Horace M. Kallen. Ithaca: New School for Research and Cornell University Press, 1947, pp. 63–69.
  • "Cultural Relativism and Ideological Peace". In Lyman Bryson, Louis Finfelstein, and R. M. MacIver (eds), Approaches to World Peace. New York: Harper & Brothers, 1944, pp. 609–618. Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 67–78.
  • "Pluralism and Intellectual Democracy". Conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, Second Symposium. New York: Conference on Science, Philosophy and Religion, 1942, pp. 196–212. Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 51–66.
  • "The Unfinished Business of Democracy". Survey Graphic 31 (November 1942): 455–61.
  • "Democracy Faces a World Order". Harvard Educational Review 12.2 (March 1942): 121–28.
  • "The Moral Imperatives for World Order". Summary of Proceedings, Institute of International Relations, Mills College, Oakland, CA, June 18–28, 1944, 19–20. Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain Locke, 143, 151–152.
  • "Major Prophet of Democracy". Review of Race and Democratic Society by Franz Boas. Journal of Negro Education 15.2 (Spring 1946): 191–92.
  • "Ballad for Democracy". Opportunity: Journal of Negro Life 18:8 (August 1940): 228–29.
  • Three Corollaries of Cultural Relativism. Proceedings of the Second Conference on the Scientific and the Democratic Faith. New York, 1941.
  • "Reason and Race". Phylon 8:1 (1947): 17–27. Reprinted in Jeffrey C. Stewart, ed. The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. New York and London: Garland, 1983, pp. 319–27.
  • "Values That Matter". Review of The Realms of Value, by Ralph Barton Perry. Key Reporter 19.3 (1954): 4.
  • "Is There a Basis for Spiritual Unity in the World Today?" Town Meeting: Bulletin of America's Town Meeting on the Air 8.5 (June 1, 1942): 3–12.
  • "Unity through Diversity: A Baháʼí Principle". The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. IV, 1930–1932. Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1989 [1933]. Reprinted in Locke 1989, 133–138. Note: Leonard Harris' reference (Locke 1989, 133 n.) should be amended to read, Volume IV, 1930–1932 (not "V, 1932–1934").
  • "Lessons in World Crisis". The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. IX, 1940–1944. Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1945. Reprint, Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1980 [1945].
  • "The Orientation of Hope". The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. V, 1932–1934. Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1936. Reprint in Locke 1989, 129–132. Note: Leonard Harris' reference (Locke 1989, 129 n.) should be amended to read, "Volume V, 1932–1934" (not "Volume IV, 1930–1932").
  • "A Baháʼí Inter-Racial Conference". The Baháʼí Magazine (Star of the West), 18.10 (January 1928): 315–16.
  • "Educator and Publicist", Star of the West 22.8 (November 1931), 254–55. Obituary of George William Cook [Baha'i], 1855–1931.
  • "Impressions of Haifa". [Appreciation of Baha'i leader, Shoghi Effendi, whom Locke met during his first of two Baha'i pilgrimages to Haifa, Palestine (now Israel)]. Star of the West 15.1 (1924): 13–14; Alaine [sic] Locke, "Impressions of Haifa", in Baháʼí Year Book, Vol. One, April 1925 – April 1926, comp. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States and Canada (New York: Baháʼí Publishing Committee, 1926), 81, 83; Alaine [sic] Locke, "Impressions of Haifa", in The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. II, April 1926 – April 1928, comp. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States and Canada (New York: Baháʼí Publishing Committee, 1928; reprint, Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1980), 125, 127; Alain Locke, "Impressions of Haifa", in The Baháʼí World: A Biennial International Record, Vol. III, April 1928 – April 1930, comp. National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States and Canada (New York: Baháʼí Publishing Committee, 1930; reprint, Wilmette: Baháʼí Publishing Trust, 1980), 280, 282.
  • "Minorities and the Social Mind". Progressive Education 12 (March 1935): 141–50.
  • The High Cost of Prejudice. Forum 78 (December 1927).
  • The Negro Poets of the United States. Anthology of Magazine Verse 1926 and Yearbook of American Poetry. Sesquicentennial edition. Ed. William S. Braithwaite. Boston: B.J. Brimmer, 1926, pp. 143–151.
  • The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture. Edited by Jeffrey C. Stewart. New York and London: Garland, 1983, pp. 43–45.
  • Plays of Negro Life: A Source-Book of Native American Drama. Alain Locke and Montgomery Davis (eds). New York and Evanston: Harper and Row, 1927. "Decorations and Illustrations by Aaron Douglas".
  • "Impressions of Luxor". The Howard Alumnus 2.4 (May 1924): 74–78.

Posthumous works

Alain Locke's previously unpublished, posthumous works include:

Locke, Alain. "The Moon Maiden" and "Alain Locke in His Own Words: Three Essays". World Order 36.3 (2005): 37–48. Edited, introduced and annotated by Christopher Buck and Betty J. Fisher.

Four previously unpublished works by Alain Locke:

  • "The Moon Maiden" (37) [a love poem for a white woman who left him];
  • "The Gospel for the Twentieth Century" (39–42);
  • "Peace between Black and White in the United States" (42–45);
  • "Five Phases of Democracy" (45–48).

Locke, Alain. "Alain Locke: Four Talks Redefining Democracy, Education, and World Citizenship". Edited, introduced and annotated by Christopher Buck and Betty J. Fisher. World Order 38.3 (2006/2007): 21–41.

Four previously unpublished speeches/essays by Alain Locke:

  • "The Preservation of the Democratic Ideal" (1938 or 1939);
  • "Stretching Our Social Mind" (1944);
  • "On Becoming World Citizens" (1946);
  • "Creative Democracy" (1946 or 1947).

See also

Further reading

  • Adamson, Peter and Jeffers, Chike. Freedom through Art: Alain Locke, History of Africana Philosophy Podcast, Episode 78, 13 June 2021.
  • Akam, Everett. "Just One African American on the Current Rhodes Scholarship List". The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 30:1 (2000): 58–59.
  • Buck, Christopher. Alain Locke: Faith and Philosophy. Los Angeles: Kalimat Press, 2005.[38]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Alain Locke: Race Leader, Social Philosopher, Baháʼí Pluralist". World Order 36.3 (2005): 7–36.[39]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Alain Locke in His Own Words: Three Essays". World Order 36.3 (2005): 37–48.[39]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Alain Locke". American Writers: A Collection of Literary Biographies. Supplement XIV. Edited by Jay Parini. Farmington Hills, Michigan: Scribner's Reference/The Gale Group, 2004. 195–219.[40]
  • Buck, Christopher and Betty J. Fisher. "Alain Locke: Four Talks Redefining Democracy, Education, and World Citizenship. Edited and introduced by Christopher Buck and Betty J. Fisher. World Order 38.3 (2006/2007): 21–41.[41]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Rare Film Clip of Alain Locke in Washington, D.C. (1937)"[42]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Rare Film Clip of Alain Locke at Howard University (1937)"[43]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Rare Film Clip of Alain Locke at Harmon Art Exhibit (1933)"[44]
  • Buck, Christopher. "Alain Locke: 'Race Amity' and the Baháʼí Faith". Alain Locke Centenary Program. Association of American Rhodes Scholars. Howard University, Washington DC (September 24, 2007).[45]
  • Butcher, Margaret J. The Negro in American Culture: Based on Materials Left by Alain Locke, Knopf, 1956.
  • Cain, Rudolph A. "Alain Leroy Locke: Crusader and Advocate for the Education of African American Adults". The Journal of Negro Education 64:1 (1995): 87–99.
  • Charles, John C. "What Was Africa to Him? Alain Locke, Cultural Nationalism, and the Rhetoric of Empire during the New Negro Renaissance." in Tarver, Australia and Barnes, Paula C. eds. New Voices on the Harlem Renaissance: Essays on Race, Gender, and Literary Discourse. Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson UP, 2005.
  • Crane, Clare Bloodgood. Alain Locke and the Negro Renaissance (thesis), University of California, San Diego, 1971.
  • Du Bois, W. E. B. "The Younger Literary Movement". Crisis 28 (February 1924), pp. 161–163.
  • Eze, Chielozona. The Dilemma of Ethnic Identity: Alain Locke's Vision of Transcultural Societies. Lewiston, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2005.
  • Harris, L. and Charles Molesworth. Alain Locke: Biography of a Philosopher. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008.
  • Harris, Leonard, ed. The Philosophy of Alain Locke: Harlem Renaissance and Beyond. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1989.
  • Harris, Leonard, ed. The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke: A Reader on Value Theory, Aesthetics, Community, Culture, Race, and Education. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 1999.
  • Holmes, Eugene C. "Alain Leroy Locke: A Sketch". The Phylon Quarterly 20:1 (1994): 82–89.
  • Linnemann, Russell J., ed. Alain Locke: Reflections on a Modern Renaissance Man. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1982.
  • Donald Markwell, "Instincts to Lead": On Leadership, Peace, and Education, Connor Court.[46]
  • Maus, Derek C. Entry on Alain Locke in Advocates and Activists Between the Wars, edited by David G. Izzo. West Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill Press, 2003.
  • Molesworth, Charles, ed. The Collected Works of Alain Locke. Oxford University Press, 2012. With an introduction by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
  • Ostrom, Hans. "Alain Locke," in Hans Ostrom and J. David Macey (eds), The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature, Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishers, 2005. Volume III, 988–989.
  • Posnock, Ross. "Black Is Brilliant",[47] =The New Republic, April 15, 2009
  • Sellers, Frances Stead. "The 60-year journey of the ashes of Alain Locke, father of the Harlem Renaissance", The Washington Post, September 12, 2014.[48]
  • Stewart, Jeffrey C., ed. The Critical Temper of Alain Locke. Garland, 1983.
  • Stewart, Jeffrey C. "Alain Leroy Locke at Oxford: The First African-American Rhodes Scholar". The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 31:1 (2001): 112–117.
  • Stewart, Jeffrey C. "The New Negro: The Life of Alain Locke." Oxford University Press, 2018
  • Washington, Johnny. Alain Locke and Philosophy: A Quest for Cultural Pluralism. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1986.
  • Washington, Johnny. A Journey into the Philosophy of Alain Locke. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 1994.
  • Zoeller, Jack. "Alain Locke at Oxford: Race and the Rhodes Scholarships," The American Oxonian, Vol. XCIV, No. 2 (Spring 2007).[12]
  • Africa Within[49]
  • The Negro and His Music: Negro Art: Past and Present. New York: Arno Press, 1969.

References

  1. ^ Stewart, Jeffrey C. (2018). The New Negro: The Life of Alain Locke. Oxford University Press. p. 15. ISBN 978-0195089578.
  2. ^ a b Kirsch, Adam (March–April 2018). "Art and Activism: Rediscovering Alain Locke and the project of black self-realization". Harvard Magazine. Retrieved March 6, 2020. review of Jeffrey C. Stewart, The New Negro: The Life of Alain Locke (Oxford University Press, 2018)
  3. ^ Cone, James H. (2000). Risks of Faith: The Emergence of a Black Theology of Liberation, 1968–1998. Beacon Press. p. 152. ISBN 9780807009512.
  4. ^ a b Note: Locke always gave his year of birth as "1886", and many sources give 1886. He was, however, born in 1885. A note by Locke in the Alain Locke Papers (archived at Howard University), discovered by Christopher Buck, says why Locke represented the year of his birth as 1886 rather than 1885: "In the Alain Locke Papers, there is a note in Locke's handwriting that reads: 'Alain Leroy Locke[:] Alan registered as Arthur (white Phila Vital Statistics owing prejudice of Quaker physician Isaac Smedley to answering question of race. [B]orn 13 So. 19th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sunday between 10 and 11 A.M. September 13, 1885. Called Roy as a child[.] Alain from 16 on. [illegible] First born son. 2nd brother born 1889—lived 2 months. Named Arthur first selected for me.' ... As to why he represented his year of birth as 1886 rather than 1885, Locke may have wanted to avoid the embarrassment of having future biographers discover that he was registered as white on his birth certificate." Buck, Christopher. Alain Locke – Faith and Philosophy," Studies in Bábí and Baháʼí Religions, Vol 18, Anthony A. Lee General Editor, pp. 11–12. ISBN 978-1-890688-38-7
  5. ^ Stewart, p. 16.
  6. ^ Gates, Lacey. Biography: Alain Leroy Locke September 1, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, Pennsylvania State University Center for the Book. Retrieved October 10, 2008.
  7. ^ a b c d Christopher Buck (2005). Lee, Anthony A. (ed.). Alain Locke: Faith and Philosophy. Studies in Bábí and Baháʼí Religions. Vol. 18. Kalimat Press. pp. 64, 198. ISBN 978-1-890688-38-7.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Sellers, Frances Stead (September 12, 2014). "The 60-year journey of the ashes of Alain Locke, father of the Harlem Renaissance". Washington Post Magazine. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  9. ^ "How They Lived". Making History. Retrieved September 2, 2020.
  10. ^ Locke, as quoted from Donald Markwell (2013), "Instincts to Lead": On Leadership, Peace, and Education, Connor Court. Also from rhodesscholarshiptrust.com September 14, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Jack Zoeller, "Alain Locke at Oxford: Race and the Rhodes Scholarships," The American Oxonian, Vol. XCIV, No. 2 (Spring 2007).
  12. ^ a b "Presentation on Alain Locke (Pennsylvania & Hertford 1907) by Jack Zoeller (New York & Univ '72)". The Association of American Rhodes Scholars.
  13. ^ . Howard University Library System. 1998. Archived from the original on August 20, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2014.
  14. ^ a b Salley, Columbus (1999). The Black 100: A Ranking of the Most Influential African-Americans, Past and Present. Citadel Press. p. 137. ISBN 9780806520483.
  15. ^ a b Carter, Jacoby Adeshei (2012). "Alain LeRoy Locke". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved August 21, 2020.
  16. ^ Nunes, Zita Cristina (November 20, 2018). "Cataloging Black Knowledge: How Dorothy Porter Assembled and Organized a Premier Africana Research Collection". Perspectives on History. Retrieved November 24, 2018.
  17. ^ Appel, JM. St. James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture, May 2, 2009. Locke biography
  18. ^ Schaefer, Richard T (2008). Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity, and Society, Volume 1. Sage Reference. p. 1296. ISBN 9781412926942.
  19. ^ Carter, Jacoby Adeshei (2012), "Alain LeRoy Locke", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Summer 2012 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved April 1, 2021
  20. ^ Calo, Mary Ann (2004). "Alain Locke and American Art Criticism". American Art. 18 (1): 88–97. doi:10.1086/421311. ISSN 1073-9300. JSTOR 10.1086/421311. S2CID 194127630.
  21. ^ a b c DuBois Shaw (2012). "Creating a New Negro Art in America". Transition (108): 75–87. doi:10.2979/transition.108.75. ISSN 0041-1191.
  22. ^ a b Locke, Alain (1940). The Negro in Art. New York: Hacker Art Books Inc.
  23. ^ "Alain Locke's Advocacy of the Baha'i Faith". July 20, 2021. Retrieved March 8, 2022.
  24. ^ a b c d Buck, Christopher (2005). Alain Locke: Faith and Philosophy. Los Angeles: Kalimat Press. p. 64.
  25. ^ Christopher Buck (December 4, 2018). "The Baháʼí "Pupil of the Eye" Metaphor; Promoting Ideal Race Relations in Jim Crow America". In Loni Bramson (ed.). The Baháʼí Faith and African American History: Creating Racial and Religious Diversity. Lexington Books. pp. 20–21. ISBN 978-1-4985-7003-9. OCLC 1084418420.
  26. ^ Clark, Phillip (October 6, 2008). "Hidden History: Alain Locke is the Key (Part II)". The New Gay. Retrieved September 12, 2014.
  27. ^ a b "A.L. Locke, Howard U. Professor, 67". The Washington Post. June 11, 1954. p. 22.
  28. ^ "Dr. Alain Locke, Teacher, Author". The New York Times. June 10, 1954. p. 31.
  29. ^ Boyd, Herb (August 22, 2019). "Dr. Margaret Just Butcher, Educator and Political Activist". Amsterdam News. p. 1. from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  30. ^ Boyd, Herb (August 22, 2019). "Dr. Margaret Just Butcher, Educator and Political Activist". Amsterdam News. p. 2. from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  31. ^ Winslow, Henry F. (December 1956). "Mosaic Vision". The Crisis. 63 (10): 633–634.
  32. ^ Campus Tours March 4, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Howard University, Alain Locke Hall
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External links

  •   Media related to Alain LeRoy Locke at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Alain LeRoy Locke at Wikiquote
  • Works by or about Alain LeRoy Locke at Internet Archive
  • Carter, Jacoby Adeshei. "Alain LeRoy Locke". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Haslett, Tobi (May 14, 2018). "The Man Who Led the Harlem Renaissance-and His Hidden Hungers". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 11, 2021.
  • Making History: Christian Cole, Alain Locke and Oscar Wilde at Oxford

alain, leroy, locke, september, 1885, june, 1954, american, writer, philosopher, educator, patron, arts, distinguished, 1907, first, african, american, rhodes, scholar, locke, became, known, philosophical, architect, acknowledged, dean, harlem, renaissance, fr. Alain LeRoy Locke September 13 1885 June 9 1954 was an American writer philosopher educator and patron of the arts Distinguished in 1907 as the first African American Rhodes Scholar Locke became known as the philosophical architect the acknowledged Dean of the Harlem Renaissance 2 He is frequently included in listings of influential African Americans On March 19 1968 the Rev Dr Martin Luther King Jr proclaimed We re going to let our children know that the only philosophers that lived were not Plato and Aristotle but W E B Du Bois and Alain Locke came through the universe 3 Alain LeRoy LockeLocke circa 1946BornArthur Leroy Locke 1 1885 09 13 September 13 1885Philadelphia Pennsylvania U S DiedJune 9 1954 1954 06 09 aged 68 New York City New York U S Resting placeCongressional CemeteryOccupationWriter philosopher educator and patron of the artsLanguageEnglishEducationCentral High School Philadelphia Harvard UniversityHertford College OxfordHumboldt University of BerlinPennsylvania Historical MarkerOfficial nameAlain Leroy Locke 1886 1954 TypeCityCriteriaAfrican American Education Professions amp Vocations WritersDesignated1991Location2221 S 5th St Philadelphia39 55 14 N 75 09 20 W 39 92065 N 75 15545 W 39 92065 75 15545 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Teaching and scholarship 3 Harlem Renaissance and the New Negro 4 Feud with Albert C Barnes 5 Religious beliefs 6 Sexual orientation 7 Death influence and legacy 7 1 Journey of ashes 7 2 Influence legacy and honors 7 3 Major works 7 4 Posthumous works 8 See also 9 Further reading 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and education Edit Alain LeRoy Locke c 1907 He was born Arthur Leroy Locke in Philadelphia Pennsylvania on September 13 1885 4 to parents Pliny Ishmael Locke 1850 1892 and Mary nee Hawkins Locke 1853 1922 both of whom were descended from prominent families of free blacks Called Roy as a boy he was their only child His father was the first black employee of the U S Postal Service and his paternal grandfather taught at Philadelphia s Institute for Colored Youth His mother Mary was a teacher and inspired Locke s passion for education and literature Mary s grandfather Charles Shorter fought as a soldier and was a hero in the War of 1812 2 5 At the age of 16 Locke chose to use the first name of Alain 4 In 1902 Locke graduated from Central High School in Philadelphia second in his 107th class in the academic institution He also attended Philadelphia School of Pedagogy 6 In 1907 Locke graduated from Harvard University with degrees in English and philosophy he was honored as a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Society and recipient of the Bowdoin prize 7 That year he was the first African American to be selected as a Rhodes Scholar to the University of Oxford and the last to be selected until 1963 when John Edgar Wideman and John Stanley Sanders a future notable writer and politician respectively were selected In the early 20th century Rhodes selectors did not meet candidates in person but there is evidence that at least some selectors knew that Locke was African American 8 On arriving at Oxford Locke was denied admission to several colleges Several American Rhodes Scholars from the South refused to live in the same college or attend events with Locke 7 8 He was finally admitted to Hertford College where he studied literature philosophy Greek and Latin from 1907 1910 Alongside his friend and fellow student Pixley ka Isaka Seme he was part of the Oxford Cosmopolitan Club contributing to its first publication 9 In 1910 he attended the University of Berlin where he studied philosophy Locke wrote from Oxford in 1910 that the primary aim and obligation of a Rhodes Scholar is to acquire at Oxford and abroad generally a liberal education and to continue subsequently the Rhodes mission of international understanding throughout life and in his own country If once more it should prove impossible for nations to understand one another as nations then as Goethe said they must learn to tolerate each other as individuals 10 11 12 Teaching and scholarship EditLocke received an assistant professorship in English at Howard University in 1912 13 While at Howard he became a member of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity Locke returned to Harvard in 1916 to work on his doctoral dissertation The Problem of Classification in the Theory of Value In his thesis he discusses the causes of opinions and social biases and that these are not objectively true or false and therefore not universal Locke received his PhD in philosophy in 1918 Locke returned to Howard University as the chair of the department of philosophy During this period he began teaching the first classes on race relations After working to gain equal pay for African American and white faculty at the university he was dismissed in 1925 14 Following the appointment in 1926 of Mordecai W Johnson the first African American president of Howard Locke was reinstated in 1928 at the university Beginning in 1935 he returned to philosophy as a topic of his writing 15 He continued to teach generations of students at Howard until he retired in 1953 Locke Hall on the Howard campus is named in his honor Among his prominent former students is actor Ossie Davis who said that Locke encouraged him to go to Harlem because of his interest in theatre And he did In addition to teaching philosophy Locke promoted African American artists writers and musicians He encouraged them to explore Africa and its many cultures as inspiration for their works He encouraged them to depict African and African American subjects and to draw on their history for subject material The library resources built up by Dorothy B Porter to support these studies included materials which he donated from his travels and contacts 16 Harlem Renaissance and the New Negro EditLocke was the guest editor of the March 1925 issue of the periodical Survey Graphic for a special edition titled Harlem Mecca of the New Negro about Harlem and the Harlem Renaissance which helped educate white readers about its flourishing culture 17 In December of that year he expanded the issue into The New Negro a collection of writings by him and other African Americans which would become one of his best known works A landmark in black literature later acclaimed as the first national book of African America 18 it was an instant success Locke contributed five essays the Foreword The New Negro Negro Youth Speaks The Negro Spirituals and The Legacy of Ancestral Arts This book established his reputation as a leading African American literary critic and aesthete 15 Locke s philosophy of the New Negro was grounded in the concept of race building that race is not merely an issue of heredity but is more an issue of society and culture 19 He raised overall awareness of potential black equality he said that no longer would blacks allow themselves to adjust or comply with unreasonable white requests This idea was based on self confidence and political awareness Although in the past the laws regarding equality had been ignored without consequence by white America Locke s philosophical idea of The New Negro allowed for fair treatment Because this was an idea and not a law people held its power If they wanted this idea to flourish they were the ones who would need to enforce it through their actions and overall points of view While his own writing was sophisticated philosophy and therefore not popularly accessible he mentored other writers in the movement who would become more broadly known such as Zora Neale Hurston 8 The philosophical basis of the Renaissance has since been widely recognized to originate from Locke 20 Feud with Albert C Barnes EditOne author whose work Locke edited for both Survey Graphic as well as The New Negro was art collector critic and theorist Albert Barnes Barnes and Locke were connected in their shared views on the importance of Negro art in America 21 Barnes promulgated notions of the superiority of black art in terms of spirituality and emotion owing to the collective suffering from which black artists draw to create their work 21 Locke argued for the primacy of craft objects and the visual tradition as being the greatest contributor of black art to the American canon 22 The commonalities between the two men s stance on black art led Barnes to believe Locke was stealing his ideas creating a rift between the two men 21 Locke touches on his feud with Barnes in his book The Negro in Art 22 Religious beliefs Edit Painting by Betsy Graves Reyneau Locke identified himself as a Baha i throughout the last half of his life 1918 1954 23 He declared his belief in Bahaʼu llah in the year 1918 Due to the lack of an official enrollment system for the religion the date when Locke converted to that faith is unverified 24 However the National Bahaʼi Archives discovered a Bahaʼi Historical Record card that Locke completed in 1935 for a Bahaʼi census from the National Spiritual Assembly 24 He was one of seven African American members from the Washington D C Bahaʼi movement to complete the card 24 On the card Locke wrote the year 1918 as the year he was accepted into the Bahaʼi religion and wrote Washington D C as the place he was accepted 24 It was common to write to ʻAbdu l Baha to declare one s new faith and Locke received a letter or tablet from ʻAbdu l Baha in return When ʻAbdu l Baha died in 1921 Locke enjoyed a close relationship with Shoghi Effendi then head of the Bahaʼi Faith Shoghi Effendi is reported to have said to Locke People as you Mr Gregory Dr Esslemont and some other dear souls are as rare as diamond 7 He is among some 40 African Americans known to have joined the religion during the ministry of ʻAbdu l Baha before the leader s death in later 1921 25 Sexual orientation EditLocke was homosexual and may have encouraged and supported other gay African Americans who were part of the Harlem Renaissance 26 Given the discriminatory laws against it he was not fully open about his orientation 8 He referred to it as a point of vulnerable invulnerability representing an area of both risk and strength 7 Death influence and legacy EditAfter his retirement from Howard University in 1953 Locke moved to New York City 27 He suffered from heart disease 27 Following a six week illness he died at Mount Sinai Hospital on June 9 1954 28 During his illness he was cared for by his friend and mentee Margaret Just Butcher 29 30 Butcher used notes from Locke s unfinished work to write The Negro in American Culture 1956 31 Journey of ashes Edit Locke was cremated and his remains given to Dr Arthur Fauset Locke s close friend and executor of his estate He was an anthropologist who was a major figure in the Harlem Renaissance After Fauset died in 1983 and the remains were given to his friend Reverend Sadie Mitchell who ministered at African Episcopal Church of St Thomas in Philadelphia Mitchell retained the ashes until the mid 1990s when she asked Dr J Weldon Norris a professor of music at Howard University to take the ashes to the university The ashes were held at Howard University s Moorland Spingarn Research Center until 2007 That year they were discovered when two former Rhodes scholars were working on the Centennial of Locke s selection as a Rhodes Scholar Concerned that the human remains were not properly cared for the university transferred them to its W Montague Cobb Research Laboratory which had extensive experience handling human remains and had worked on those from the African Burying Ground in New York Locke s ashes which had been stored in a plain paper bag in a simple round metal container were transferred to a small funerary urn and locked in a safe 8 Howard University officials initially considered having Locke s ashes buried in a niche at Locke Hall on the Howard campus as Langston Hughes s ashes had been interred in 1991 at the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture in New York City But Kurt Schmoke the university s legal counsel was concerned about setting a precedent that might lead to too many people trying to gain burials at the university After reviewing legal issues university officials decided to bury the remains off site They thought to bury Locke beside his mother Mary Hawkins Locke But Howard officials quickly discovered a problem She had been interred at Columbian Harmony Cemetery in Washington D C but that cemetery closed in 1959 Her remains and others from that cemetery were transferred to National Harmony Memorial Park She and 37 000 other unclaimed remains from Columbian Harmony were buried in a mass grave with no markers 8 University officials eventually decided to bury Alain Locke s remains at historic Congressional Cemetery in Washington DC Former African American Rhodes Scholars raised 8 000 to purchase a burial plot there Locke was interred at Congressional Cemetery on September 13 2014 His tombstone reads 1885 1954Herald of the Harlem RenaissanceExponent of Cultural Pluralism On the back of the headstone is a nine pointed Bahaʼi star representing Locke s religious beliefs a Zimbabwe Bird emblem of the nation Locke adopted as a Rhodes Scholar a lambda symbol of the gay rights movement and the logo of Phi Beta Sigma the fraternity Locke joined In the center of these four symbols is an Art Deco representation of an African woman s face set against the rays of the sun This image is a simplified version of the bookplate that Harlem Renaissance painter Aaron Douglas designed for Locke Below the bookplate image are the words Teneo te Africa I hold you my Africa This represented Locke s belief that African Americans needed to study African culture to enlarge their sense of self 8 Influence legacy and honors Edit At Howard University the main building for the College of Arts and Sciences is dedicated to his legacy and was named Alain Locke Hall 32 His personal and literary papers are held within the manuscript department in the university s Moorland Spingarn Research Center Locke s former residence on R Street NW in Washington s Logan Circle neighborhood is marked with a historical plaque 33 In 2002 scholar Molefi Kete Asante listed Locke among his 100 Greatest African Americans 34 Similarly Columbus Salley s book The Black 100 included Locke ranking him as the 36th most influential African American 14 In 2019 Jeffrey Stewart won a Pulitzer Prize in Biography for The New Negro the Life of Alain Locke 35 In 2020 Rhodes Scholar and attorney Dr Ann Olivarius wrote a guest column in The Financial Times suggesting that statues of Locke and Zambian civil rights activist Lucy Banda Sichone replace the statue of Cecil Rhodes at Oriel College Oxford University 36 Schools named after Locke include Alain L Locke Elementary School PS 208 in South Harlem The Locke High School in Los Angeles The Alain Locke Public School an elementary school in West Philadelphia Alain Locke Charter Academy in Chicago Alain Locke Elementary School in Gary IndianaMajor works Edit First edition cover of The New Negro 1925 In addition to the books listed below Locke edited the Bronze Booklet series a set of eight volumes published in the 1930s by Associates in Negro Folk Education He regularly published reviews of poetry and literature by African Americans in journals such as Opportunity and Phylon His works include The New Negro An Interpretation New York Albert and Charles Boni 1925 Harlem Mecca of the New Negro Survey Graphic 6 6 March 1 1925 37 When Peoples Meet A Study of Race and Culture Contacts Alain Locke and Bernhard J Stern eds New York Committee on Workshops Progressive Education Association 1942 The Philosophy of Alain Locke Harlem Renaissance and Beyond Edited by Leonard Harris Philadelphia Temple University Press 1989 Race Contacts and Interracial Relations Lectures of the Theory and Practice of Race Washington D C Howard University Press 1916 Reprinted edited by Jeffery C Stewart Washington Howard University Press 1992 Negro Art Past and Present Washington Associates in Negro Folk Education 1936 Bronze Booklet No 3 The Negro and His Music Washington Associates in Negro Folk Education 1936 Bronze Booklet No 2 The Negro in the Three Americas Journal of Negro Education 14 Winter 1944 7 18 Negro Spirituals Freedom A Concert in Celebration of the 75th Anniversary of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States 1940 Compact disc New York Bridge 2002 Audio 1 14 Spirituals 1940 The Critical Temper of Alain Locke A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture Edited by Jeffrey C Stewart New York and London Garland 1983 pp 123 26 The New Negro An Interpretation New York Arno Press 1925 Four Negro Poets New York Simon and Schuster 1927 Plays of Negro Life a Source Book of Native American Drama New York Harper and Brothers 1927 A Decade of Negro Self Expression Charlottesville Virginia 1928 The Negro in America Chicago American Library Association 1933 Negro Art Past and Present Washington D C Associates in Negro Folk Education 1936 The Negro and His Music Washington D C Associates in Negro Folk Education 1936 also New York Kennikat Press 1936 The Negro in Art A Pictorial Record of the Negro Artist and of the Negro Theme in Art Washington D C Associates in Negro Folk Education 1940 also New York Hacker Art Books 1940 A Collection of Congo Art Arts 2 February 1927 60 70 Harlem Dark Weather vane Survey Graphic 25 August 1936 457 462 493 495 The Negro and the American Stage Theatre Arts Monthly 10 February 1926 112 120 The Negro in Art Christian Education 13 November 1931 210 220 Negro Speaks for Himself The Survey 52 April 15 1924 71 72 The Negro s Contribution to American Art and Literature The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 140 November 1928 234 247 The Negro s Contribution to American Culture Journal of Negro Education 8 July 1939 521 529 A Note on African Art Opportunity 2 May 1924 134 138 Our Little Renaissance Ebony and Topaz edited by Charles S Johnson New York National Urban League 1927 Steps Towards the Negro Theatre Crisis 25 December 1922 66 68 The Problem of Classification in the Theory of Value or an Outline of a Genetic System of Values PhD dissertation Harvard 1917 Locke Alain Autobiographical sketch Twentieth Century Authors Edited by Stanley Kunitz and Howard Haycroft New York 1942 p 837 The Negro Group Group Relations and Group Antagonisms Edited by Robert M MacIver New York Institute for Religious Studies 1943 World View on Race and Democracy A Study Guide in Human Group Relations Chicago American Library Association 1943 Le Role du negre dans la culture des Ameriques Port au Prince Haiti Imprimerie de l etat 1943 Values and Imperatives In Sidney Hook and Horace M Kallen eds American Philosophy Today and Tomorrow New York Lee Furman 1935 pp 312 33 Reprinted Freeport NY Books for Libraries Press 1968 Harris The Philosophy of Alain Locke 31 50 Pluralism and Ideological Peace In Milton R Konvitz and Sidney Hook eds Freedom and Experience Essays Presented to Horace M Kallen Ithaca New School for Research and Cornell University Press 1947 pp 63 69 Cultural Relativism and Ideological Peace In Lyman Bryson Louis Finfelstein and R M MacIver eds Approaches to World Peace New York Harper amp Brothers 1944 pp 609 618 Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain Locke 67 78 Pluralism and Intellectual Democracy Conference on Science Philosophy and Religion Second Symposium New York Conference on Science Philosophy and Religion 1942 pp 196 212 Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain Locke 51 66 The Unfinished Business of Democracy Survey Graphic 31 November 1942 455 61 Democracy Faces a World Order Harvard Educational Review 12 2 March 1942 121 28 The Moral Imperatives for World Order Summary of Proceedings Institute of International Relations Mills College Oakland CA June 18 28 1944 19 20 Reprinted in The Philosophy of Alain Locke 143 151 152 Major Prophet of Democracy Review of Race and Democratic Society by Franz Boas Journal of Negro Education 15 2 Spring 1946 191 92 Ballad for Democracy Opportunity Journal of Negro Life 18 8 August 1940 228 29 Three Corollaries of Cultural Relativism Proceedings of the Second Conference on the Scientific and the Democratic Faith New York 1941 Reason and Race Phylon 8 1 1947 17 27 Reprinted in Jeffrey C Stewart ed The Critical Temper of Alain Locke A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture New York and London Garland 1983 pp 319 27 Values That Matter Review of The Realms of Value by Ralph Barton Perry Key Reporter 19 3 1954 4 Is There a Basis for Spiritual Unity in the World Today Town Meeting Bulletin of America s Town Meeting on the Air 8 5 June 1 1942 3 12 Unity through Diversity A Bahaʼi Principle The Bahaʼi World A Biennial International Record Vol IV 1930 1932 Wilmette Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1989 1933 Reprinted in Locke 1989 133 138 Note Leonard Harris reference Locke 1989 133 n should be amended to read Volume IV 1930 1932 not V 1932 1934 Lessons in World Crisis The Bahaʼi World A Biennial International Record Vol IX 1940 1944 Wilmette Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1945 Reprint Wilmette Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1980 1945 The Orientation of Hope The Bahaʼi World A Biennial International Record Vol V 1932 1934 Wilmette Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1936 Reprint in Locke 1989 129 132 Note Leonard Harris reference Locke 1989 129 n should be amended to read Volume V 1932 1934 not Volume IV 1930 1932 A Bahaʼi Inter Racial Conference The Bahaʼi Magazine Star of the West 18 10 January 1928 315 16 Educator and Publicist Star of the West 22 8 November 1931 254 55 Obituary of George William Cook Baha i 1855 1931 Impressions of Haifa Appreciation of Baha i leader Shoghi Effendi whom Locke met during his first of two Baha i pilgrimages to Haifa Palestine now Israel Star of the West 15 1 1924 13 14 Alaine sic Locke Impressions of Haifa in Bahaʼi Year Book Vol One April 1925 April 1926 comp National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States and Canada New York Bahaʼi Publishing Committee 1926 81 83 Alaine sic Locke Impressions of Haifa in The Bahaʼi World A Biennial International Record Vol II April 1926 April 1928 comp National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States and Canada New York Bahaʼi Publishing Committee 1928 reprint Wilmette Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1980 125 127 Alain Locke Impressions of Haifa in The Bahaʼi World A Biennial International Record Vol III April 1928 April 1930 comp National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States and Canada New York Bahaʼi Publishing Committee 1930 reprint Wilmette Bahaʼi Publishing Trust 1980 280 282 Minorities and the Social Mind Progressive Education 12 March 1935 141 50 The High Cost of Prejudice Forum 78 December 1927 The Negro Poets of the United States Anthology of Magazine Verse 1926 and Yearbook of American Poetry Sesquicentennial edition Ed William S Braithwaite Boston B J Brimmer 1926 pp 143 151 The Critical Temper of Alain Locke A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture Edited by Jeffrey C Stewart New York and London Garland 1983 pp 43 45 Plays of Negro Life A Source Book of Native American Drama Alain Locke and Montgomery Davis eds New York and Evanston Harper and Row 1927 Decorations and Illustrations by Aaron Douglas Impressions of Luxor The Howard Alumnus 2 4 May 1924 74 78 Posthumous works Edit Alain Locke s previously unpublished posthumous works include Locke Alain The Moon Maiden and Alain Locke in His Own Words Three Essays World Order 36 3 2005 37 48 Edited introduced and annotated by Christopher Buck and Betty J Fisher Four previously unpublished works by Alain Locke The Moon Maiden 37 a love poem for a white woman who left him The Gospel for the Twentieth Century 39 42 Peace between Black and White in the United States 42 45 Five Phases of Democracy 45 48 Locke Alain Alain Locke Four Talks Redefining Democracy Education and World Citizenship Edited introduced and annotated by Christopher Buck and Betty J Fisher World Order 38 3 2006 2007 21 41 Four previously unpublished speeches essays by Alain Locke The Preservation of the Democratic Ideal 1938 or 1939 Stretching Our Social Mind 1944 On Becoming World Citizens 1946 Creative Democracy 1946 or 1947 See also EditHarlem Renaissance American philosophy List of American philosophers Leonard Harris Jeffrey C Stewart The New Negro The Life of Alain LockeFurther reading EditAdamson Peter and Jeffers Chike Freedom through Art Alain Locke History of Africana Philosophy Podcast Episode 78 13 June 2021 Akam Everett Just One African American on the Current Rhodes Scholarship List The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 30 1 2000 58 59 Buck Christopher Alain Locke Faith and Philosophy Los Angeles Kalimat Press 2005 38 Buck Christopher Alain Locke Race Leader Social Philosopher Bahaʼi Pluralist World Order 36 3 2005 7 36 39 Buck Christopher Alain Locke in His Own Words Three Essays World Order 36 3 2005 37 48 39 Buck Christopher Alain Locke American Writers A Collection of Literary Biographies Supplement XIV Edited by Jay Parini Farmington Hills Michigan Scribner s Reference The Gale Group 2004 195 219 40 Buck Christopher and Betty J Fisher Alain Locke Four Talks Redefining Democracy Education and World Citizenship Edited and introduced by Christopher Buck and Betty J Fisher World Order 38 3 2006 2007 21 41 41 Buck Christopher Rare Film Clip of Alain Locke in Washington D C 1937 42 Buck Christopher Rare Film Clip of Alain Locke at Howard University 1937 43 Buck Christopher Rare Film Clip of Alain Locke at Harmon Art Exhibit 1933 44 Buck Christopher Alain Locke Race Amity and the Bahaʼi Faith Alain Locke Centenary Program Association of American Rhodes Scholars Howard University Washington DC September 24 2007 45 Butcher Margaret J The Negro in American Culture Based on Materials Left by Alain Locke Knopf 1956 Cain Rudolph A Alain Leroy Locke Crusader and Advocate for the Education of African American Adults The Journal of Negro Education 64 1 1995 87 99 Charles John C What Was Africa to Him Alain Locke Cultural Nationalism and the Rhetoric of Empire during the New Negro Renaissance in Tarver Australia and Barnes Paula C eds New Voices on the Harlem Renaissance Essays on Race Gender and Literary Discourse Madison NJ Fairleigh Dickinson UP 2005 Crane Clare Bloodgood Alain Locke and the Negro Renaissance thesis University of California San Diego 1971 Du Bois W E B The Younger Literary Movement Crisis 28 February 1924 pp 161 163 Eze Chielozona The Dilemma of Ethnic Identity Alain Locke s Vision of Transcultural Societies Lewiston New York Edwin Mellen Press 2005 Harris L and Charles Molesworth Alain Locke Biography of a Philosopher Chicago University of Chicago Press 2008 Harris Leonard ed The Philosophy of Alain Locke Harlem Renaissance and Beyond Philadelphia Temple University Press 1989 Harris Leonard ed The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke A Reader on Value Theory Aesthetics Community Culture Race and Education Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield 1999 Holmes Eugene C Alain Leroy Locke A Sketch The Phylon Quarterly 20 1 1994 82 89 Linnemann Russell J ed Alain Locke Reflections on a Modern Renaissance Man Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1982 Donald Markwell Instincts to Lead On Leadership Peace and Education Connor Court 46 Maus Derek C Entry on Alain Locke in Advocates and Activists Between the Wars edited by David G Izzo West Cornwall CT Locust Hill Press 2003 Molesworth Charles ed The Collected Works of Alain Locke Oxford University Press 2012 With an introduction by Henry Louis Gates Jr Ostrom Hans Alain Locke in Hans Ostrom and J David Macey eds The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature Westport CT Greenwood Publishers 2005 Volume III 988 989 Posnock Ross Black Is Brilliant 47 The New Republic April 15 2009 Sellers Frances Stead The 60 year journey of the ashes of Alain Locke father of the Harlem Renaissance The Washington Post September 12 2014 48 Stewart Jeffrey C ed The Critical Temper of Alain Locke Garland 1983 Stewart Jeffrey C Alain Leroy Locke at Oxford The First African American Rhodes Scholar The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 31 1 2001 112 117 Stewart Jeffrey C The New Negro The Life of Alain Locke Oxford University Press 2018 Washington Johnny Alain Locke and Philosophy A Quest for Cultural Pluralism Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 1986 Washington Johnny A Journey into the Philosophy of Alain Locke Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press 1994 Zoeller Jack Alain Locke at Oxford Race and the Rhodes Scholarships The American Oxonian Vol XCIV No 2 Spring 2007 12 Africa Within 49 The Negro and His Music Negro Art Past and Present New York Arno Press 1969 References Edit Stewart Jeffrey C 2018 The New Negro The Life of Alain Locke Oxford University Press p 15 ISBN 978 0195089578 a b Kirsch Adam March April 2018 Art and Activism Rediscovering Alain Locke and the project of black self realization Harvard Magazine Retrieved March 6 2020 review of Jeffrey C Stewart The New Negro The Life of Alain Locke Oxford University Press 2018 Cone James H 2000 Risks of Faith The Emergence of a Black Theology of Liberation 1968 1998 Beacon Press p 152 ISBN 9780807009512 a b Note Locke always gave his year of birth as 1886 and many sources give 1886 He was however born in 1885 A note by Locke in the Alain Locke Papers archived at Howard University discovered by Christopher Buck says why Locke represented the year of his birth as 1886 rather than 1885 In the Alain Locke Papers there is a note in Locke s handwriting that reads Alain Leroy Locke Alan registered as Arthur white Phila Vital Statistics owing prejudice of Quaker physician Isaac Smedley to answering question of race B orn 13 So 19th Street Philadelphia Pa Sunday between 10 and 11 A M September 13 1885 Called Roy as a child Alain from 16 on illegible First born son 2nd brother born 1889 lived 2 months Named Arthur first selected for me As to why he represented his year of birth as 1886 rather than 1885 Locke may have wanted to avoid the embarrassment of having future biographers discover that he was registered as white on his birth certificate Buck Christopher Alain Locke Faith and Philosophy Studies in Babi and Bahaʼi Religions Vol 18 Anthony A Lee General Editor pp 11 12 ISBN 978 1 890688 38 7 Stewart p 16 Gates Lacey Biography Alain Leroy Locke Archived September 1 2006 at the Wayback Machine Pennsylvania State University Center for the Book Retrieved October 10 2008 a b c d Christopher Buck 2005 Lee Anthony A ed Alain Locke Faith and Philosophy Studies in Babi and Bahaʼi Religions Vol 18 Kalimat Press pp 64 198 ISBN 978 1 890688 38 7 a b c d e f g Sellers Frances Stead September 12 2014 The 60 year journey of the ashes of Alain Locke father of the Harlem Renaissance Washington Post Magazine Retrieved September 12 2014 How They Lived Making History Retrieved September 2 2020 Locke as quoted from Donald Markwell 2013 Instincts to Lead On Leadership Peace and Education Connor Court Also from rhodesscholarshiptrust com Archived September 14 2014 at the Wayback Machine Jack Zoeller Alain Locke at Oxford Race and the Rhodes Scholarships The American Oxonian Vol XCIV No 2 Spring 2007 a b Presentation on Alain Locke Pennsylvania amp Hertford 1907 by Jack Zoeller New York amp Univ 72 The Association of American Rhodes Scholars Alain Leroy Locke Bibliography Howard University Library System 1998 Archived from the original on August 20 2014 Retrieved September 14 2014 a b Salley Columbus 1999 The Black 100 A Ranking of the Most Influential African Americans Past and Present Citadel Press p 137 ISBN 9780806520483 a b Carter Jacoby Adeshei 2012 Alain LeRoy Locke Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved August 21 2020 Nunes Zita Cristina November 20 2018 Cataloging Black Knowledge How Dorothy Porter Assembled and Organized a Premier Africana Research Collection Perspectives on History Retrieved November 24 2018 Appel JM St James Encyclopedia of Popular Culture May 2 2009 Locke biography Schaefer Richard T 2008 Encyclopedia of Race Ethnicity and Society Volume 1 Sage Reference p 1296 ISBN 9781412926942 Carter Jacoby Adeshei 2012 Alain LeRoy Locke in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Summer 2012 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved April 1 2021 Calo Mary Ann 2004 Alain Locke and American Art Criticism American Art 18 1 88 97 doi 10 1086 421311 ISSN 1073 9300 JSTOR 10 1086 421311 S2CID 194127630 a b c DuBois Shaw 2012 Creating a New Negro Art in America Transition 108 75 87 doi 10 2979 transition 108 75 ISSN 0041 1191 a b Locke Alain 1940 The Negro in Art New York Hacker Art Books Inc Alain Locke s Advocacy of the Baha i Faith July 20 2021 Retrieved March 8 2022 a b c d Buck Christopher 2005 Alain Locke Faith and Philosophy Los Angeles Kalimat Press p 64 Christopher Buck December 4 2018 The Bahaʼi Pupil of the Eye Metaphor Promoting Ideal Race Relations in Jim Crow America In Loni Bramson ed The Bahaʼi Faith and African American History Creating Racial and Religious Diversity Lexington Books pp 20 21 ISBN 978 1 4985 7003 9 OCLC 1084418420 Clark Phillip October 6 2008 Hidden History Alain Locke is the Key Part II The New Gay Retrieved September 12 2014 a b A L Locke Howard U Professor 67 The Washington Post June 11 1954 p 22 Dr Alain Locke Teacher Author The New York Times June 10 1954 p 31 Boyd Herb August 22 2019 Dr Margaret Just Butcher Educator and Political Activist Amsterdam News p 1 Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved February 14 2020 Boyd Herb August 22 2019 Dr Margaret Just Butcher Educator and Political Activist Amsterdam News p 2 Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved February 16 2020 Winslow Henry F December 1956 Mosaic Vision The Crisis 63 10 633 634 Campus Tours Archived March 4 2016 at the Wayback Machine Howard University Alain Locke Hall Roberts Kim Vera Dan Alain Locke DC Writers Homes Washington DC Poetry Mutual Archived from the original on August 28 2018 Retrieved February 6 2018 Asante Molefi Kete 2002 100 Greatest African Americans A Biographical Encyclopedia Amherst New York Prometheus Books ISBN 1 57392 963 8 2019 Pulitzer Prize Winners www pulitzer org Ann Olivarius Rhodes must fall but who should stand in his place The Financial Times 15 June 2020 The Survey Graphic Harlem Number Archived from the original on March 13 2009 Retrieved May 26 2010 Buck Christopher April 30 2009 Religious Myths and Visions of America How Minority Faiths Redefined America s World Role Praeger via Amazon a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 5 2009 Retrieved January 5 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 5 2009 Retrieved January 5 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Alain Locke Four Talks Redefining Democracy Education and World Citizenship PDF Archived from the original PDF on July 8 2011 Retrieved July 8 2011 Archived copy Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved July 8 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved July 8 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy Archived from the original on July 8 2011 Retrieved July 8 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on January 5 2009 Retrieved January 5 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Speech by the Warden of Rhodes House Oxford Dr Donald Markwell at the Departure Lunch for the 2010 US Bermuda and Caribbean Rhodes Scholars PDF September 29 2010 Archived from the original PDF on September 14 2014 Retrieved September 14 2014 http www tnr com booksarts story html id e9d5f5c3 16b0 4506 ac08 2911400f4ad4 dead link Sellers Frances Stead September 11 2014 The 60 year journey of the ashes of Alain Locke father of the Harlem Renaissance Washington Post com Alain Locke africawithin com Archived from the original on February 5 2012 Retrieved October 22 2008 External links Edit Media related to Alain LeRoy Locke at Wikimedia Commons Quotations related to Alain LeRoy Locke at Wikiquote Works by or about Alain LeRoy Locke at Internet Archive Carter Jacoby Adeshei Alain LeRoy Locke In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Haslett Tobi May 14 2018 The Man Who Led the Harlem Renaissance and His Hidden Hungers The New Yorker Retrieved February 11 2021 Making History Christian Cole Alain Locke and Oscar Wilde at Oxford Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alain LeRoy Locke amp oldid 1124821820, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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