This document discusses several intellectuals from the Harlem Renaissance period including Alain Locke, Montgomery T. Gregory, and Charles Johnson. It provides biographical details about each person such as where they taught, their occupations, and their accomplishments. It then compares some modern figures like Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and Masatoshi Koshiba to the Harlem Renaissance intellectuals.
4. Alain Locke
(Harlem)
Alain Locke was a educator
that taught all over the
place. These are some of the
places he taught at:
*Harvard University
*Fisk University
*French Oriental Archaeological Society
*and Many more
5.
6.
7. Montgomery T. Gregory
(Harlem)
Montgomery Gregory used to worked
with Alain Locke in creating the
Styles Liberty club. Montgomery
also was a:
*dramatist
*educator
*social philosopher and activist
*historian
*the leading Figure,
in the National Negro Theater Movement.
8.
9.
10. Charles Johnson
(Harlem)
Charles Johnson was a professor
at the University of Washington,
also the author of “Middle Passage”.
Charles has received the Academy
award in Literature.
11.
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13. Steve Jobs
(modern)
Vs
Alain Locke
(Harlem)
Steve Jobs is the CEO of Apple and the
co-founder as well. unlike Alain Locke,
he did not go around the world
educating people in University’s. Steve
Jobs instead made a computer to do it
for you.
14.
15.
16. Bill Gates
(modern)
Vs
Charles Johnson
(Harlem)
Bill Gates is the Founder of Microsoft,
author, and philanthropies. Unlike Charles
Johnson, Gates did not teach in any University,
Bill Gates was actually kicked out of Harvard.
Both Gates and Johnson did write books, but Gates’s
books are all about computers (PC’S) and Johnson's
were all about African American freedom’s.
17.
18.
19. Masatoshi Koshiba
(modern)
Vs
Montgomery T. Gregory
(Harlem)
Masatoshi Koshiba is a neutrino astrophysics,
he has graduated from University of Tokyo and
has a masters in Physics. Much unlike Montgomery
Gregory, Masatoshi has been awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize. Both do teach but Masatoshi’s class is alot
harder than Gregory’s.