In 1925, four poems by Johnson were included in Alain Locke's anthology,
The New Negro: an Interpretation (the four poems were "To Samuel Coleridge Taylor, Upon Hearing His," "The Ordeal," "Escape," and "The Riddle"). Since Locke's anthology became one of the defining publications of the era, her inclusion in that anthology (alongside Arna Bontemps, Anne Spencer, and Angelina Grimke) helped establish her as one of the key figures of the Harlem Renaissance. (For more on the periodization and definition of the Harlem Renaissance,
click here). Claudia Tate, in her introduction to
The Selected Works of Georgia Douglas Johnson (1997), refers to Johnson as "the most anthologized woman poet of the New Negro Renaissance" (xviii).