The answer is New Stone Age.
The correct answer is C) Harlem Renaissance
Between 1920 and 1940, the quest for racial equality and a search for self-identity among African-Americans inspired the Harlem Renaissance, an upsurge of creative expression in the arts, centered in a part of Manhattan occupied largely by African-Americans.
Many historians consider the Harlem Renaissance as a folden age in the culture of black people in the United States for the many kinds of artistic expressions that surged in music and literature. Many African Americans that lived in the South migrated to the North of the country.
Among the most important figures of this period, we can name writer Langston Hughes, writer Zorah Neale Hurston, poet Countee Cullen, and musician Louis Armstrong.
Answer:
ok that's all I could gather for now ill send the rest as a comment
<span>
At the Yalta Conference, the Allies agreed that the liberated nations
of Europe would create democratic governments of their own choice,
defeated Germany would be divided into occupation zones, Germany would
pay war reparations, and the Soviet Union would enter the war against
Japan.
In early February 1945 the three Allied leaders—Roosevelt, Churchill,
and Stalin—met at the Black Sea resort of Yalta . There they postponed
certain matters, such as the question of postwar German reparations and
status, but they did reach some major decisions. The Soviet Union agreed
to enter the war against Japan after Germany 's defeat and was to
receive important territorial concessions in return. The Big Three also
agreed to establish a postwar world organization. Most controversial was
their understanding to hold free elections in recently liberated Poland
, an agreement that the Soviets failed to abide by and later opened
Roosevelt to charges of being naive. </span>
Answer:
John Locke
Explanation:
Locke was a very important philosopher that was one of the first to propose the ideas of natural rights and popular sovereignty.
In his work called the Two Treatises of Government, he discussed his beliefs in unalienable (natural) rights and the importance of popular sovereignty in government.