fbpx
Wikipedia

The New Negro

The New Negro: An Interpretation (1925) is an anthology of fiction, poetry, and essays on African and African-American art and literature edited by Alain Locke, who lived in Washington, DC, and taught at Howard University during the Harlem Renaissance.[1] As a collection of the creative efforts coming out of the burgeoning New Negro Movement or Harlem Renaissance, the book is considered by literary scholars and critics to be the definitive text of the movement.[2] "The Negro Renaissance" included Locke's title essay "The New Negro", as well as nonfiction essays, poetry, and fiction by writers including Countee Cullen, Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Claude McKay, Jean Toomer, and Eric Walrond.

The New Negro
EditorAlain Locke
PublisherAtheneum
Publication date
1925
OCLC640055594

The New Negro: An Interpretation dives into how the African Americans sought social, political, and artistic change. Instead of accepting their position in society, Locke saw the new negro as championing and demanding civil rights. In addition, his anthology sought to change old stereotypes and replaced them with new visions of black identity that resisted simplification. The essays and poems in the anthology mirror real life events and experiences.[3]

The anthology reflects the voice of middle-class African-American citizens that wanted to have equal civil rights like their white, middle-class counterparts. However, some writers, such as Langston Hughes, sought to give voice to the lower, working class.[3]

Structure Edit

Part 1: The Negro Renaissance Edit

Part 1 contains Locke's title essay "The New Negro", as well as the fiction and poetry sections. One of the poems, "White Houses", represents the African American's struggle to confront and challenge the White House and white America, in order to fight for civil rights. It shows a figure being shut out and left on the street to fend for himself. This is a figure who is not allowed the glory of the inside world, which represents the American ideals of freedom and opportunity.[4]

Part 2: The New Negro in a New World Edit

"The New Negro in a New World" includes social and political analysis by writers including W. E. B. Du Bois, historian E. Franklin Frazier, Melville J. Herskovits, James Weldon Johnson, Paul U. Kellogg, Elise Johnson McDougald, Kelly Miller, Robert R. Moton, and activist Walter Francis White.[5]

The book contains several portraits by Winold Reiss and illustrations by Aaron Douglas. It was published by Albert and Charles Boni, New York, in 1925.[6]

Themes Edit

The "Old" vs The "New" Negro Edit

Locke commonly draws on the theme of the "Old" vs. the "New Negro". The Old Negro according to Locke was a "creature of moral debate and historical controversy".[7] The Old Negro was restricted by the inhumane conditions of slavery that he was forced to live in; historically traumatized due to events forced upon them and the social perspective of them as a whole. The Old Negro was something to be pushed and moved around and told what to do and worried about.[8] The Old Negro was a product of stereotypes and judgments that were put on them, not ones that they created. They were forced to live in a shadow of themselves and others' actions.[9]

The New Negro according to Locke is a Negro that now has an understanding of oneself. They no longer lack self respect and self dependence, which has created a new dynamic and allowed the birth of the New Negro. The Negro spirituals revealed themselves; suppressed for generations under the stereotypes of Wesleyan hymn harmony, secretive, half-ashamed, until the courage of being natural brought them out—and behold, there was folk music.[8] They have become the Negro of today which is also the changed Negro. Locke speaks about the migration having an effect on the Negro, leveling the playing field and increasing the realm of how the Negro is viewed because they were moved out of the south and into other areas where they could start over. The migration in a sense transformed the Negro and fused them together as they all came from all over the world, all walks of life, and all different backgrounds.[10]

Self-expression Edit

One of the themes in Locke's anthology is self-expression. Locke states, "It was rather the necessity for fuller, truer self-expression, the realization of the unwisdom of allowing social discrimination to segregate him mentally, and a counter-attitude to cramp and fetter his own living—and so the 'spite-wall'... has happily been taken down."[8] He explains how it is important to realize that social discrimination can mentally affect you and bring you down. In order to break through that social discrimination, self-expression is needed to show who you truly are, and what you believe in. For Locke, this idea of self-expression is embedded in the poetry, art, and education of the Negro community.[8] Locke includes essays and poems in his anthology that emphasize the theme of self-expression. For example, the poem “Tableau,” by Countée Cullen, is about a white boy and a black boy who walk with locked arms while others judge them.[11] It represents that despite the history of racial discrimination from the whites to the blacks, they show what they believe is right in their self-expression, no matter how other people judge them. Their self-expression allows them not to let the judgement make them conform to societal norms with the separation of blacks and whites. Cullen's poem, “Heritage,” also shows how one finds self-expression in facing the weight of their own history as African Americans brought from Africa to America as slaves. Langston Hughes’ poem, “Youth,” puts forth the message that Negro youth have a bright future, and that they should rise together in their self-expression and seek freedom.[12]

Jazz and Blues Edit

The publication of Locke's anthology coincided with the rise of the Jazz Age, the Roaring Twenties , and the Lost Generation.[13] Locke's anthology acknowledges how the Jazz Age heavily impacted both individuals and the African-American community collectively, describing it as "a spiritual coming of age"[8] for African-American artists and thinkers, who seized upon their “first chances for group expression and self-determination.” Harlem Renaissance poets and artists such as Langston Hughes, Claude McKay, and Georgia Douglas Johnson explored the beauty and pain of black life through jazz and blues and sought to define themselves and their community outside of white stereotypes.[14]

Some of the most prominent African-American artists who were greatly influenced by the "New Negro" concept, as reflected in their music and concert works, were William Grant Still and Duke Ellington. Ellington, a renowned jazz artist, began to reflect the "New Negro" in his music, particularly in the jazz suite Black, Brown, and Beige.[15] The Harlem Renaissance prompted a renewed interest in black culture that was even reflected in the work of white artists, the most well known example being George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess.[16]

Reception Edit

The release of The New Negro and the writing and philosophy laid out by Locke were met with wide support. However, not everyone agreed with the New Negro movement and its ideas. Some criticized the author's selections, specifically Eric Walrond, who wrote the collection of short stories Tropic Death (1926). He found Locke's selected "contemporary black leaders inadequate or ineffective in dealing with the cultural and political aspirations of black masses".[17] Others, like the African-American academic Harold Cruse, even found the term New Negro “politically naive or overly optimistic”. Even some modern late 20th-century authors such as Gilbert Osofsky were concerned that the ideas of the New Negro would go on to stereotype and glamorize black life.[18] Notable black scholar, author, and sociologist W. E. B. DuBois also had a different vision for the type of movement that should have stemmed from the New Negro ideology, hoping that it would go beyond an artistic movement and become more political in nature.[19] The New Negro did eventually influence a movement that went beyond being simply artistic and reshaped the minds of African Americans through political beliefs and promoted a sense of black involvement in the American government, but Locke was adamant about the movement going beyond the United States borders and being a worldwide awakening. Yet, due to the circumstances of the time and the tremendous diversity of opinions about the future of the movement, ideals stemming from the New Negro would not be widely acknowledged again until the civil rights movement (1954–1968).[20] Still, Locke would go on to continue defending the idea of the New Negro.[citation needed][8]

Legacy Edit

After Locke published The New Negro, the anthology seemed to have served its purpose in trying to demonstrate that African Americans were advancing intellectually, culturally, and socially. This was important in a time like the early 20th century when African Americans were still being looked down upon by most whites. They did not get the same respect as whites did, and that was changing. The publication of The New Negro was able to help many of the authors featured in the anthology get their names and work more widely known. The publication became a rallying cry to other African Americans to try and join the up-and-coming New Negro movement at the time. The New Negro was also instrumental in making strides toward dispelling negative stereotypes associated with African Americans.[21]

Locke's legacy sparks a reoccurring interest in examining African culture and art. Not only was his philosophy important during the Harlem Renaissance period, but continuing today, researchers and academia continue to analyze Locke's work. His anthology The New Negro: An Interpretation has endured years of reprinting spanning from 1925 until 2015.[22] It has been reprinted in book form some 35 times since its original publication in 1925[22] by New York publisher Albert and Charles Boni.[23]  The most recent reprint was published by Mansfield Center CT: Martino Publishing, 2015.[24]

Beyond Locke's work being reprinted, his influences extend to other authors and academics interested in Locke's views and philosophy of African culture and art.  Author Anna Pochmara wrote The Making of the New Negro.[25] Journal articles by Leonard Harris, Alain Locke and Community and Identity: Alain Locke's Atavism.[26][27]  Essays by John C. Charles, What was Africa to him? : Alain Locke in the book New Voices on the Harlem Renaissance.[28]  

Locke's influence on the Harlem Renaissance encouraged artists and writers like Zora Neale Hurston to seek inspiration from Africa.[1]  Artists Aaron Douglas, William H. Johnson, Archibald Motley, and Horace Pippin created artwork representing the “New Negro Movement” influenced by Locke’s anthology.[29]

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b "Alain LeRoy Locke". Biography. Retrieved May 18, 2019.
  2. ^ Arnold Rampersad, introduction to The New Negro: Voices of the Harlem Renaissance, 1992
  3. ^ a b "Issues and Debates in African American Literature". University of Delaware; library. 2018. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  4. ^ Locke, Alain (1925). White Houses from The New Negro: An Interpretation.
  5. ^ Richard A. Long, "New Negro, The", The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature. Ed. William L. Andrews, Frances Smith Foster, and Trudier Harris. Oxford University Press, 2001. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford University Press.
  6. ^ Winold Reiss (illustrator) & Aaron Douglas (illustrator) (1925). Alain Locke (ed.). The New Negro. New York: Albert and Charles Boni.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  7. ^ Locke, Alain (2015). The New Negro An Interpretation. Mansfield Centre, CT: Martino Publishing. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-61427-802-3.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Locke, Alain (March 1925). "Enter the New Negro" (PDF). Survey Graphic (Harlem: Mecca of the New Negro). Retrieved May 14, 2019 – via National Humanities Center.
  9. ^ Locke, Alain (August 1, 2012), "The New Negro (1925)", Within the Circle, Duke University Press, pp. 21–31, doi:10.1215/9780822399889-002, ISBN 9780822399889, S2CID 163331846
  10. ^ Hutchinson, George (June 14, 2007). The Cambridge Companion to the Harlem Renaissance. Cambridge University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-521-67368-6.
  11. ^ Locke, Alain (1997). The New Negro. New York: A Touchtone Book. p. 130.
  12. ^ Graham, Maryemma (2011). "The New Negro Renaissance". Africana Age.
  13. ^ "American culture in the 1920s". KhanAcademy. Retrieved May 18, 2019.
  14. ^ "An Introduction to the Harlem Renaissance". The Poetry Foundation. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  15. ^ Oppenheim, Mike (March 3, 2013). "The Harlem Renaissance And American Music". All About Jazz. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  16. ^ Booker, Rashid. "The Harlem Renaissance and the "New Negro"". NoirGuides. Retrieved May 24, 2018.
  17. ^ Walrond, Eric (1972). Tropic Death. Collier Books.
  18. ^ Osofsky, Gilbert (1996). Harlem, the making of a ghetto : Negro New York, 1890-1930. Chicago: Ivan R. Dee. ISBN 978-1-56663-104-4.
  19. ^ Watts, Eric King. 2012. Hearing the Hurt : Rhetoric, Aesthetics, and Politics of the New Negro Movement. Rhetoric, Culture, and Social Critique. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=nlebk&AN=462860&site=ehost-live&scope=site.
  20. ^ Mitchell, Ernest Julius. “‘Black Renaissance’: A Brief History of the Concept.” Amerikastudien / American Studies 55, no. 4 (2010): 641–65. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41158720.
  21. ^ Hutchinson (2007). The Cambridge Companion to the Harlem Renaissance. p. 141.
  22. ^ a b Formats and Editions of The new Negro : an interpretation [WorldCat.org]. OCLC 1888432.
  23. ^ Locke, Alain LeRoy; Reiss, Winold (1925). The new Negro: an interpretation. New York: A. and C. Boni. OCLC 238841541.
  24. ^ Locke, Alain; Reiss, Winold (2015). The new Negro: an interpretation. ISBN 9781614278023. OCLC 957434639.
  25. ^ Pochmara, Anna (2011). The Making of the New Negro: Black Authorship, Masculinity, and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 9789089643193. JSTOR j.ctt45kffb.
  26. ^ Harris, Leonard (1988). "Identity: Alain Locke's Atavism". Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society. 24 (1): 65–83. ISSN 0009-1774. JSTOR 27794948.
  27. ^ Harris, Leonard (1997). "Alain Locke and Community". The Journal of Ethics. 1 (3): 239–247. doi:10.1023/A:1009720305495. ISSN 1382-4554. JSTOR 25115549. S2CID 141214677.
  28. ^ Tarver, Australia, and Paula C. Barnes (2006). New Voices On the Harlem Renaissance: Essays On Race, Gender, and Literary Discourse. Madison [N.J.]: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  29. ^ "Artists by art movement: Harlem Renaissance (New Negro Movement)". www.wikiart.org. Retrieved May 18, 2019.

External links Edit

  • The New Negro: An Interpretation at the Internet Archive
  • New Introduction to The New Negro an Interpretation (Konecky & Konecky, March 3, 2020)
  • "Harlem" by Alain Locke

negro, biography, alain, leroy, locke, jeffrey, stewart, life, alain, locke, interpretation, 1925, anthology, fiction, poetry, essays, african, african, american, literature, edited, alain, locke, lived, washington, taught, howard, university, during, harlem, . For the biography of Alain LeRoy Locke by Jeffrey C Stewart see The New Negro The Life of Alain Locke The New Negro An Interpretation 1925 is an anthology of fiction poetry and essays on African and African American art and literature edited by Alain Locke who lived in Washington DC and taught at Howard University during the Harlem Renaissance 1 As a collection of the creative efforts coming out of the burgeoning New Negro Movement or Harlem Renaissance the book is considered by literary scholars and critics to be the definitive text of the movement 2 The Negro Renaissance included Locke s title essay The New Negro as well as nonfiction essays poetry and fiction by writers including Countee Cullen Langston Hughes Zora Neale Hurston Claude McKay Jean Toomer and Eric Walrond The New NegroEditorAlain LockePublisherAtheneumPublication date1925OCLC640055594The New Negro An Interpretation dives into how the African Americans sought social political and artistic change Instead of accepting their position in society Locke saw the new negro as championing and demanding civil rights In addition his anthology sought to change old stereotypes and replaced them with new visions of black identity that resisted simplification The essays and poems in the anthology mirror real life events and experiences 3 The anthology reflects the voice of middle class African American citizens that wanted to have equal civil rights like their white middle class counterparts However some writers such as Langston Hughes sought to give voice to the lower working class 3 Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Part 1 The Negro Renaissance 1 2 Part 2 The New Negro in a New World 2 Themes 2 1 The Old vs The New Negro 2 2 Self expression 2 3 Jazz and Blues 3 Reception 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksStructure EditPart 1 The Negro Renaissance Edit Part 1 contains Locke s title essay The New Negro as well as the fiction and poetry sections One of the poems White Houses represents the African American s struggle to confront and challenge the White House and white America in order to fight for civil rights It shows a figure being shut out and left on the street to fend for himself This is a figure who is not allowed the glory of the inside world which represents the American ideals of freedom and opportunity 4 Part 2 The New Negro in a New World Edit The New Negro in a New World includes social and political analysis by writers including W E B Du Bois historian E Franklin Frazier Melville J Herskovits James Weldon Johnson Paul U Kellogg Elise Johnson McDougald Kelly Miller Robert R Moton and activist Walter Francis White 5 The book contains several portraits by Winold Reiss and illustrations by Aaron Douglas It was published by Albert and Charles Boni New York in 1925 6 Themes EditThe Old vs The New Negro Edit Locke commonly draws on the theme of the Old vs the New Negro The Old Negro according to Locke was a creature of moral debate and historical controversy 7 The Old Negro was restricted by the inhumane conditions of slavery that he was forced to live in historically traumatized due to events forced upon them and the social perspective of them as a whole The Old Negro was something to be pushed and moved around and told what to do and worried about 8 The Old Negro was a product of stereotypes and judgments that were put on them not ones that they created They were forced to live in a shadow of themselves and others actions 9 The New Negro according to Locke is a Negro that now has an understanding of oneself They no longer lack self respect and self dependence which has created a new dynamic and allowed the birth of the New Negro The Negro spirituals revealed themselves suppressed for generations under the stereotypes of Wesleyan hymn harmony secretive half ashamed until the courage of being natural brought them out and behold there was folk music 8 They have become the Negro of today which is also the changed Negro Locke speaks about the migration having an effect on the Negro leveling the playing field and increasing the realm of how the Negro is viewed because they were moved out of the south and into other areas where they could start over The migration in a sense transformed the Negro and fused them together as they all came from all over the world all walks of life and all different backgrounds 10 Self expression Edit One of the themes in Locke s anthology is self expression Locke states It was rather the necessity for fuller truer self expression the realization of the unwisdom of allowing social discrimination to segregate him mentally and a counter attitude to cramp and fetter his own living and so the spite wall has happily been taken down 8 He explains how it is important to realize that social discrimination can mentally affect you and bring you down In order to break through that social discrimination self expression is needed to show who you truly are and what you believe in For Locke this idea of self expression is embedded in the poetry art and education of the Negro community 8 Locke includes essays and poems in his anthology that emphasize the theme of self expression For example the poem Tableau by Countee Cullen is about a white boy and a black boy who walk with locked arms while others judge them 11 It represents that despite the history of racial discrimination from the whites to the blacks they show what they believe is right in their self expression no matter how other people judge them Their self expression allows them not to let the judgement make them conform to societal norms with the separation of blacks and whites Cullen s poem Heritage also shows how one finds self expression in facing the weight of their own history as African Americans brought from Africa to America as slaves Langston Hughes poem Youth puts forth the message that Negro youth have a bright future and that they should rise together in their self expression and seek freedom 12 Jazz and Blues Edit The publication of Locke s anthology coincided with the rise of the Jazz Age the Roaring Twenties and the Lost Generation 13 Locke s anthology acknowledges how the Jazz Age heavily impacted both individuals and the African American community collectively describing it as a spiritual coming of age 8 for African American artists and thinkers who seized upon their first chances for group expression and self determination Harlem Renaissance poets and artists such as Langston Hughes Claude McKay and Georgia Douglas Johnson explored the beauty and pain of black life through jazz and blues and sought to define themselves and their community outside of white stereotypes 14 Some of the most prominent African American artists who were greatly influenced by the New Negro concept as reflected in their music and concert works were William Grant Still and Duke Ellington Ellington a renowned jazz artist began to reflect the New Negro in his music particularly in the jazz suite Black Brown and Beige 15 The Harlem Renaissance prompted a renewed interest in black culture that was even reflected in the work of white artists the most well known example being George Gershwin s Porgy and Bess 16 Reception EditThe release of The New Negro and the writing and philosophy laid out by Locke were met with wide support However not everyone agreed with the New Negro movement and its ideas Some criticized the author s selections specifically Eric Walrond who wrote the collection of short stories Tropic Death 1926 He found Locke s selected contemporary black leaders inadequate or ineffective in dealing with the cultural and political aspirations of black masses 17 Others like the African American academic Harold Cruse even found the term New Negro politically naive or overly optimistic Even some modern late 20th century authors such as Gilbert Osofsky were concerned that the ideas of the New Negro would go on to stereotype and glamorize black life 18 Notable black scholar author and sociologist W E B DuBois also had a different vision for the type of movement that should have stemmed from the New Negro ideology hoping that it would go beyond an artistic movement and become more political in nature 19 The New Negro did eventually influence a movement that went beyond being simply artistic and reshaped the minds of African Americans through political beliefs and promoted a sense of black involvement in the American government but Locke was adamant about the movement going beyond the United States borders and being a worldwide awakening Yet due to the circumstances of the time and the tremendous diversity of opinions about the future of the movement ideals stemming from the New Negro would not be widely acknowledged again until the civil rights movement 1954 1968 20 Still Locke would go on to continue defending the idea of the New Negro citation needed 8 Legacy EditAfter Locke published The New Negro the anthology seemed to have served its purpose in trying to demonstrate that African Americans were advancing intellectually culturally and socially This was important in a time like the early 20th century when African Americans were still being looked down upon by most whites They did not get the same respect as whites did and that was changing The publication of The New Negro was able to help many of the authors featured in the anthology get their names and work more widely known The publication became a rallying cry to other African Americans to try and join the up and coming New Negro movement at the time The New Negro was also instrumental in making strides toward dispelling negative stereotypes associated with African Americans 21 Locke s legacy sparks a reoccurring interest in examining African culture and art Not only was his philosophy important during the Harlem Renaissance period but continuing today researchers and academia continue to analyze Locke s work His anthology The New Negro An Interpretation has endured years of reprinting spanning from 1925 until 2015 22 It has been reprinted in book form some 35 times since its original publication in 1925 22 by New York publisher Albert and Charles Boni 23 The most recent reprint was published by Mansfield Center CT Martino Publishing 2015 24 Beyond Locke s work being reprinted his influences extend to other authors and academics interested in Locke s views and philosophy of African culture and art Author Anna Pochmara wrote The Making of the New Negro 25 Journal articles by Leonard Harris Alain Locke and Community and Identity Alain Locke s Atavism 26 27 Essays by John C Charles What was Africa to him Alain Locke in the book New Voices on the Harlem Renaissance 28 Locke s influence on the Harlem Renaissance encouraged artists and writers like Zora Neale Hurston to seek inspiration from Africa 1 Artists Aaron Douglas William H Johnson Archibald Motley and Horace Pippin created artwork representing the New Negro Movement influenced by Locke s anthology 29 See also Edit nbsp United States portalFIRE The New Negro The Life of Alain Locke Jeffrey C StewartReferences Edit a b Alain LeRoy Locke Biography Retrieved May 18 2019 Arnold Rampersad introduction to The New Negro Voices of the Harlem Renaissance 1992 a b Issues and Debates in African American Literature University of Delaware library 2018 Retrieved May 24 2018 Locke Alain 1925 White Houses from The New Negro An Interpretation Richard A Long New Negro The The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature Ed William L Andrews Frances Smith Foster and Trudier Harris Oxford University Press 2001 Oxford Reference Online Oxford University Press Winold Reiss illustrator amp Aaron Douglas illustrator 1925 Alain Locke ed The New Negro New York Albert and Charles Boni a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Locke Alain 2015 The New Negro An Interpretation Mansfield Centre CT Martino Publishing p 3 ISBN 978 1 61427 802 3 a b c d e f Locke Alain March 1925 Enter the New Negro PDF Survey Graphic Harlem Mecca of the New Negro Retrieved May 14 2019 via National Humanities Center Locke Alain August 1 2012 The New Negro 1925 Within the Circle Duke University Press pp 21 31 doi 10 1215 9780822399889 002 ISBN 9780822399889 S2CID 163331846 Hutchinson George June 14 2007 The Cambridge Companion to the Harlem Renaissance Cambridge University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 521 67368 6 Locke Alain 1997 The New Negro New York A Touchtone Book p 130 Graham Maryemma 2011 The New Negro Renaissance Africana Age American culture in the 1920s KhanAcademy Retrieved May 18 2019 An Introduction to the Harlem Renaissance The Poetry Foundation Retrieved May 24 2018 Oppenheim Mike March 3 2013 The Harlem Renaissance And American Music All About Jazz Retrieved May 24 2018 Booker Rashid The Harlem Renaissance and the New Negro NoirGuides Retrieved May 24 2018 Walrond Eric 1972 Tropic Death Collier Books Osofsky Gilbert 1996 Harlem the making of a ghetto Negro New York 1890 1930 Chicago Ivan R Dee ISBN 978 1 56663 104 4 Watts Eric King 2012 Hearing the Hurt Rhetoric Aesthetics and Politics of the New Negro Movement Rhetoric Culture and Social Critique Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press https search ebscohost com login aspx direct true amp db nlebk amp AN 462860 amp site ehost live amp scope site Mitchell Ernest Julius Black Renaissance A Brief History of the Concept Amerikastudien American Studies 55 no 4 2010 641 65 http www jstor org stable 41158720 Hutchinson 2007 The Cambridge Companion to the Harlem Renaissance p 141 a b Formats and Editions of The new Negro an interpretation WorldCat org OCLC 1888432 Locke Alain LeRoy Reiss Winold 1925 The new Negro an interpretation New York A and C Boni OCLC 238841541 Locke Alain Reiss Winold 2015 The new Negro an interpretation ISBN 9781614278023 OCLC 957434639 Pochmara Anna 2011 The Making of the New Negro Black Authorship Masculinity and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance Amsterdam University Press ISBN 9789089643193 JSTOR j ctt45kffb Harris Leonard 1988 Identity Alain Locke s Atavism Transactions of the Charles S Peirce Society 24 1 65 83 ISSN 0009 1774 JSTOR 27794948 Harris Leonard 1997 Alain Locke and Community The Journal of Ethics 1 3 239 247 doi 10 1023 A 1009720305495 ISSN 1382 4554 JSTOR 25115549 S2CID 141214677 Tarver Australia and Paula C Barnes 2006 New Voices On the Harlem Renaissance Essays On Race Gender and Literary Discourse Madison N J Fairleigh Dickinson University Press a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Artists by art movement Harlem Renaissance New Negro Movement www wikiart org Retrieved May 18 2019 External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article The new Negro an interpretation The New Negro An Interpretation at the Internet Archive New Introduction to The New Negro an Interpretation Konecky amp Konecky March 3 2020 Harlem by Alain Locke Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The New Negro amp oldid 1166937042, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.