Locke, Alain Leroy
(13 Sept. 1885–9 June 1954), philosopher and literary critic, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the son of Pliny Ishmael Locke, a lawyer, and Mary Hawkins, a teacher and member of the Felix Adler Ethical Society. Locke graduated from Central High School and the Philadelphia School of Pedagogy in Philadelphia in 1904. That same year he published his first editorial, “Moral Training in Elementary Schools,” in the Teacher, and entered undergraduate school at Harvard University. He studied at Harvard under such scholars as Josiah Royce, George H. Palmer, Ralph B. Perry, and Hugo Münsterberg before graduating in 1907 and becoming the first African American Rhodes scholar, at Hertford College, Oxford. While in Europe, he also attended lectures at the University of Berlin (1910–1911) and studied the works of Franz Brentano, Alexius Meinong, and C. F. von Ehrenfels. Locke associated with other Rhodes scholars, including Horace M. Kallen, author of the concept of cultural pluralism; H. E. Alaily, president of the Egyptian Society of England; Pa Ka Isaka Seme, a black South African law student and eventual founder of the African National Congress of South Africa; and Har Dayal from India—each concerned with national liberation in their respective homelands. The formative years of Locke's education and early career were the years just proceeding and during World War I—years of nationalist uprising and wars between the world's major nation-states. Locke joined the Howard University faculty in 1912, to eventually form the most prestigious department of philosophy at a historically African American university.In the summer of 1915 Locke began a lecture series sponsored by the Social Science Club of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, titled “Race Contacts and Interracial Relations: A Study of the Theory and Practice of Race.” Locke argued against social Darwinism, which held that distinct races exist and are biologically determined to express peculiar cultural traits. Locke believed that races were socially constructed and that cultures are the manifestation of stressed values, values always subject to transvaluation and revaluation. Locke introduced a new way of thinking about social entities by conceiving of race as a socially formed category, which, despite its foundation in social history, substantively affected material reality.Locke received his doctorate in Philosophy from Harvard in 1918 and shortly thereafter wrote “The Role of the Talented Tenth,” which supported W. E. B. Du Bois's idea that the upward mobility of approximately one-tenth of a population is crucial for the improvement of the whole population. Locke also became interested in the Baha'i faith, finding particularly attractive its emphasis on racial harmony and the interrelatedness of all religious faiths. Locke attended the 1921 Inter-Racial Amity conference on 19–21 May in Washington, D.C., and as late as 1932 published short editorials in the Baha'i World. Although he did not formally join the Baha'i faith, he remained respectful of its practices.Locke went on to help initiate the Harlem Renaissance, a period of significant cultural contributions by African Americans. The years 1924–1925 were a major turning point in Locke's life. He edited a special edition of the magazine Survey titled the Survey Graphic, on the district of Harlem in New York City. The editor of Survey was Paul U. Kellogg, and the associate editor was Jane Addams. That edition became the source for his seminal work reflecting the nature of valuation and the classicism of African American culture, The New Negro: An Interpretation of Negro Life, published in 1925. The New Negro included a collage of art by Winold Reiss and Aaron Douglas and representations of African artifacts, articles by J. A. Rogers, E. Franklin Frazier, Charles S. Johnson, Melville J. Herskovits, and Du Bois, poetry by Countée Cullen, Langston Hughes, Arna Bontemps, and Angelina Weld Grimké, spirituals, and bibliographies. The New Negro was intended as a work “by” rather than “about” African Americans, a text exuding pride, historical continuity, and a new spirit of self-respect not because a metamorphosis had occurred in the psychology of African Americans, “but because the Old Negro had long become more of a myth than a man.” The New Negro embodied Locke's definition of essential features of African American culture, themes such as the importance of self-respect in the face of social denigration; ethnic pride; overcoming racial stereotypes and idioms, such as call-and-response in the spirituals or discord and beats in jazz; and the importance that cultural hybridity, traditions, and revaluations play in shaping cross-cultural relationships. Locke promoted those features of African American folk culture that he believed could be universalized and thus become classical idioms, functioning, for Locke, as cultural ambassadors encouraging cross-cultural and racial respect. As debates over how to characterize American and African American cultural traits in literature became less a source of intellectual conflict, Locke's interests moved on to issues in education.

Alain Leroy Locke produced influential writings in the areas of philosophy, art, aesthetics, and education between the 1920s and the 1950s (National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. Painting by Winold Reiss.)
Further Reading
- Harris, Leonard. The Philosophy of Alain Locke: Harlem Renaissance and Beyond (1989)
- Harris, Leonard, ed. The Critical Pragmatism of Alain Locke (1999).
- Holmes, Eugene C. “Alain L. Locke—Philosopher, Critic, Spokesman,” Journal of Philosophy 54 (Feb. 1957): 113–118.
- Linneman, Russell J. Alain Locke: Reflections on a Modern Renaissance Man (1982)
- Stafford, Douglas K. “Alain Locke: The Child, the Man, and the People,” Journal of Negro Education, (Winter, 1961): 25–34.
- Stewart, Jeffrey C., ed. The Critical Temper of Alain Locke: A Selection of His Essays on Art and Culture (1983).
- Washington, Johnny. Alain Locke and His Philosophy: A Quest for Cultural Pluralism (1986)

