Background
Even as a child he would teach alongside his mother. With a strong love of literature, and a dream of becoming a teacher in his own future, he began teaching at the age of 16 in one of the schools his mother had established.
Even as a child he would teach alongside his mother. With a strong love of literature, and a dream of becoming a teacher in his own future, he began teaching at the age of 16 in one of the schools his mother had established.
After serving in the 25th Infantry (1942-1945), he received his Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy in English from Boston University.
Born in Columbus, Georgia, George Kent was the youngest of four children born to Irby Doctorate. Kent, a blacksmith and Louise Austin Kent, a school teacher. His formal higher education began with a B.S in English from Savannah State College. He later obtained a Masters and PH.D from Boston University, in English Language and Literature, respectively.
During these formative years, he also served in the military.
Over a long teaching career, he held numerous positions including visiting professorships with colleges and universities such as Wesleyan University, University of Connecticut, Florida Advertising & Marketing University, Grambling State College, and the University of Chicago. From the 1940s through the 1960s he held positions from Professor of English to Professor and Chairman of Languages and Literature, as well as Dean of Delaware State College.
He was also Professor and Chairman of English in the Division of Liberal Arts at Quinnipiac College. He finished his career in education as a Professor of English, with a specialty in African-American literature and poetry at the University of Chicago from 1970 until his death in 1982.
While at the University, Kent is remembered as a pioneer for being among the first tenured African-American professors at the University of Chicago and as the first African-American professor of English.
Doctor Kent should also be remembered as an intense scholar and intellectual dedicated to excellence in his work as well as in the expectations he had of the many students he taught and mentored. Throughout his tenure at the University of Chicago, he offered excellence. He brought that into the school, and for his students to whom he was fiercely loyal and held high expectations for them pursuing not only their studies but their lives in excellence.
lieutenant is in this respect that the Organization of Black students honors Doctor Kent annually at the OBS Kent Lecture.
Kent taught at Delaware State College in Dover from 1949 to 1960, and then at Quinnipiac College in Hamden, Connecticut until 1969. He then joined the University of Chicago, becoming a full professor there in 1970, a position he retained until his death.
The annual Kent Lecture at the University of Chicago is named in his honour. His specialism was Afro-American literature.
He completed the first full biography of the poet Gwendolyn Brooks just before his death from cancer in 1982.