The excerpt below is from the essay enter the new negro by alain locke in 1925. [t]he negro today wishes to be known for what he is, even in his faults and shortcomings. he now becomes a conscious contributor and lays aside the status of beneficiary and ward for that of a collaborator and participant in american civilization. the great social gain in this is the releasing of our talented group to the productive fields of cultural expression. the especially cultural recognition they win should in turn prove the key to that revaluation of the negro which must precede or accompany any considerable betterment of race relationships. which development was based on lockes argument in this passage? responses
a. suffragist movement
b. harlem renaissance
c. abolitionist movement
d. civil rights movement