Radicalism In The New Negro, By Alain Locke

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“The New Negro” as described by Alain Locke is seeking social justice, however he is doing so in a way different from the various forms of resistance that preceded him. Locke describes a shift from radicalism in the fight for social justice to a need to build a relationship between races. The “New Negro” has come to the realization that assimilation into American culture is not a viable answer; therefore he has decided to build his own culture in collaboration with American culture. The construction of this culture became known as The New Negro Movement or The Harlem Renaissance. This was the attempt of the black community to birth for themselves a status quo in which they were no longer defined by their oppressors’ views. It was with in “ The average white man of the present generation who sees the Negro daily, perhaps knows less of the Negro than did the similarly situated white man of any previous generation since the black race came to America. Pickens’s also cites this as the source of racial issues, “Furthermore and quite as important as anything there has been some change of attitude in the white people among whom the Negro lives: there is less acquaintanceship, less sympathy and toleration than formerly “. This is in concert with Locke’s belief as he states, “ if the Negro were better known, he would be better liked or better treated.” William Pickens also discusses education as a means of diversifying and uplifting the Negro community. “…for the Negro has very few lawyers, doctors, historians, and poets,-and the whit historian poet will not really write the Negro’s history nor sing his songs. Pickens’s theory of intellect intersects with Locke’s According to Locke, “The New Negro”, whose publication by Albert and Charles Boni in December 1925 symbolized the culmination of the first stage of the New Negro Renaissance in literature, was put together "to document the New Negro culturally and socially - to register the transformations of the inner and outer life of the Negro in America that have so significantly taken place in the last few

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