EVENT: Atlanta - Spelman College: Moving Image Salon

DMIS - Reel ♀ Films

The Digital Moving Image Salon's
6th Annual Reel ♀ Student Showcase
April 7 @ 7 p.m.
Science Center Auditorium

Student filmmakers Nashawn Anderson, Mychael Bond, Anissa Douglass,  Lakeshia Ford, Geralyn McPhail, and Pamela Stegall will showcase their works of art at the Digital Moving Image Salon's "Reel Women" Student Showcase.

The students' films explore the stories of Spelman's Pauline E. Drake Scholars, Black women struggling with bipolar disorder, and aspects of the sex industry that are becoming mainstream.  

 

 

BLURRED: A Portrait of Bi-Polar Disorder

Producers: Anissa Douglass and Nashawn Anderson

 


"Blurred" focuses on several African-American college students who have been diagnosed with bi-polar disorder. The documentary creates a framework in which Black communities can begin to talk about mental illness. Read More

 

Fly, Sister, Fly
Producers: Lakeshia Ford, Mychael Bond, Pamela Stegall
 


Life can be unforgiving, unpredictable, extremely painful and challenging. This dynamic documentary highlights several women who dare to challenge the norm. Determined to overcome all barriers and stereotypes, these Pauline E. Drake Scholars at Spelman College prove that you are never too old to be bold in obtaining an advanced degree. Each woman’s journey is strikingly unique and richly textured. Read More

 

 

 

What's Done in the Dark
Producers: Mychael Julianne Bond and Geralyn McPhail

 

This documentary aims a lens on the fantasy world of exotic dancing in Atlanta: the taboo, the lure, and the women behind the stigma. It challenges stereotypes about these women in search of answers and reasoning behind their career choice,; and explores the “Open Secret” that is exotic dancing.  Read More

=========================================

The Digital Moving Image Salon Presents the 6th Annual Reel ♀ event
April 6 - 7, 2010


This year's Reel Women event will feature screenings and a conversation with Euzhan Palcy, the first Black woman to direct a film at a major Hollywood studio, on Tuesday, April 6, at 7 p.m. in the Cosby Center Auditorium. 

DMIS student filmmakers Nashawn Anderson, Mychael Bond, Anissa Douglass,  Lakeshia Ford, Geralyn McPhail, and Pamela Stegall will present their films on Wednesday, April 7, at 7 p.m. in the Science Center Auditorium. 

The student films explore the stories of Spelman's Pauline E. Drake Scholars, Black women struggling with bi-polar disorder, and aspects of the sex industry that are becoming mainstream. This event, one of the 2010 Founders Day activities, will be held in the Cosby Academic Center and the Science Center. 

Read More About the Student Films 

The DMIS Showcase is co-sponsored by the Office of the Provost, the History Department and the Honors Program at Spelman 

Euzhan Palcy Biographical Sketch

Euzhan Palcy's first feature, “Sugar Cane Alley” (1983) won over 17 international awards including the Venice Film Festival’s Silver Lion, as well as Best Lead Actress Award. It also won the prestigious Cesar Award (the French equivalent to our Academy Award) for best first feature film.

Robert Redford hand picked her to attend the 1984 Sundance Director’s Lab, becoming her “American Godfather.”

She brought Marlon Brando back to the screen… Marlon Brando was so moved by her next project, “A Dry White Season” (1989), and her commitment to social change that he came out of a self-imposed retirement, agreeing to act in the film for free. Also starring in the film were actors Donald Sutherland and Susan Sarandon.

The screenplay was based upon André Brink's famous novel with the same name. It is set in South Africa, and deals with the subject of apartheid. 

Brando’s performance in the movie earned him an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor and he received the Best Actor Award at the Tokyo Film Festival. For her outstanding cinematic achievement, Palcy received the “Orson Welles Award” in Los Angeles. A few months after the release of the film Miss PALCY had the great privilege to be welcome by Mr Nelson MANDELA in South Africa.

 

 

Location
350 Spelman Ln. Miligan Bldg. 
Atlanta, GA 30314
(404) 270-5625 

 

 

 

REVIEW: Book— The History of White People - By Nell Irvin Painter - from NYTimes.com

Who’s White?

Leigh Wells

______________________________________________

THE HISTORY OF WHITE PEOPLE

By Nell Irvin Painter

Illustrated. 496 pp. W. W. Norton & Company. $27.95

_______________________________________________

Related

Up Front: Linda Gordon (March 28, 2010)

Excerpt: ‘The History of White People’ (Google Books)

Nell Irvin Painter’s Web Site

 

Audio

Robin Holland

Nell Irvin Painter

 

Published: March 25, 2010

Nell Irvin Painter’s title, “The History of White People,” is a provocation in several ways: it’s monumental in sweep, and its absurd grandiosity should call to mind the fact that writing a “History of Black People” might seem perfectly reasonable to white people. But the title is literally accurate, because the book traces characterizations of the lighter-skinned people we call white today, starting with the ancient Scythians. For those who have not yet registered how much these characterizations have changed, let me assure you that sensory observation was not the basis of racial nomenclature.

Some ancient descriptions did note color, as when the ancient Greeks recognized that their “barbaric” northern neighbors, Scythians and Celts, had lighter skin than Greeks considered normal. Most ancient peoples defined population differences culturally, not physically, and often regarded lighter people as less civilized. Centuries later, European travel writers regarded the light-skinned Circassians, a k a Caucasians, as people best fit only for slavery, yet at the same time labeled Circassian slave women the epitome of beauty. Exoticizing and sexualizing women of allegedly inferior “races” has a long and continuous history in racial thought; it’s just that today they are usually darker-skinned women.

“Whiteness studies” have so proliferated in the last two decades that historians might be forgiven a yawn in response to being told that racial divisions are fundamentally arbitrary, and that deciding who is white has been not only fluid but also heavily influenced by class and culture. In some Latin American countries, for example, the term blanquearse, to bleach oneself, is used to mean moving upward in class status. But this concept — the social and cultural construction of race over time — remains harder for many people to understand than, say, the notion that gender is a social and cultural construction, unlike sex. As recently as 10 years ago, some of my undergraduate students at the University of Wisconsin heard my explanations of critical race theory as a denial of observable physical differences.

I wish I had had this book to offer them. Painter, a renowned historian recently retired from Princeton, has written an unusual study: an intellectual history, with occasional excursions to examine vernacular usage, for popular audiences. It has much to teach everyone, including whiteness experts, but it is accessible and breezy, its coverage broad and therefore necessarily superficial.

The modern intellectual history of whiteness began among the 18th-century German scholars who invented racial “science.” Johann Joachim Winckelmann made the ancient Greeks his models of beauty by imagining them white-skinned; he may even have suppressed his own (correct) suspicion that their statues, though copied by the Romans in white marble, had originally been painted. The Dutchman Petrus Camper calculated the proportions and angles of the ideal face and skull, and produced a scale that awarded a perfect rating to the head of a Greek god and ranked Europeans as the runners-up, earning 80 out of 100. The Englishman Charles White collected skulls that he arranged from lowest to highest degree of perfection. He did not think he was seeing the gradual improvement of the human species, but assumed rather the polygenesis theory: the different races arose from separate divine ­creations and were designed with a range of quality.

The modern concept of a Caucasian race, which students my age were taught in school, came from Johann Friedrich Blumenbach of Göttingen, the most influential of this generation of race scholars. Switching from skulls to skin, he divided humans into five races by color — white, yellow, copper, tawny, and tawny-black to jet-black — but he ascribed these differences to climate. Still convinced that people of the Caucasus were the paragons of beauty, he placed residents of North Africa and India in the Caucasian category, sliding into a linguistic analysis based on the common derivation of Indo-European languages. That category, Painter notes, soon slipped free of any geographic or linguistic moorings and became a quasi-­scientific term for a race known as “white.”

Some great American heroes, notably Thomas Jefferson and Ralph Waldo Emerson, absorbed Blumenbach’s influence but relabeled the categories of white superiority. They adopted the Saxons as their ideal, imagining Americans as direct and unalloyed descendants of the English, later including the Germans. In general, Western labels for racial superiority moved thus: Caucasian → Saxon → Teutonic → Nordic → Aryan → white/Anglo.

The spread of evolutionary theory required a series of theoretical shifts, to cope with changing understandings of what is heritable. When hereditary thought produced eugenics, the effort to breed superior human beings, it relied mostly on inaccurate genetics. Nevertheless, eugenic “science” became authoritative from the late 19th century through the 1930s. Eugenics gave rise to laws in at least 30 states authorizing forced sterilization of the ostensibly feeble-minded and the hereditarily criminal. Painter cites an estimate of 65,000 sterilized against their will by 1968, after which a combined feminist and civil rights campaign succeeded in radically restricting forced sterilization. While blacks and American Indians were disproportionately victimized, intelligence testing added many immigrants and others of “inferior stock,” predominantly Appalachian whites, to the rolls of the surgically sterilized.

In the long run, the project of measuring “intelligence” probably did more than eugenics to stigmatize and hold back the nonwhite. Researchers gave I.Q. tests to 1,750,000 recruits in World War I and found that the average mental age, for those 18 and over, was 13.08 years. That experiment in mass testing failed owing to the Army’s insistence that even the lowest ranked usually became model soldiers. But I.Q. testing achieved success in driving the anti-immigration movement. The tests allowed calibrated rankings of Americans of different ancestries — the English at the top, Poles on the bottom. Returning to head measurements, other researchers computed with new categories the proportion of different “blood” in people of different races: Belgians were 60 percent Nordic (the superior European race) and 40 percent Alpine, while the Irish were 30 percent Nordic and 70 percent Mediterranean (the inferior European race). Sometimes politics produced immediate changes in these supposedly objective findings: World War I caused the downgrading of Germans from heavily Nordic to heavily Alpine.

Painter points out, but without adequate discussion, that the adoration of whiteness became particularly problematic for women, as pale blue-eyed blondes became, like so many unattainable desires, a reminder of what was second-class about the rest of us. Among the painfully comic absurdities that racial science produced was the “beauty map” constructed by Francis Galton around the turn of the 20th century: he classified people as good, medium or bad; he categorized those he saw by using pushpins and thus demonstrated that London ranked highest and Aberdeen lowest in average beauty.

Rankings of intelligence and beauty supported escalating anti-Catholicism and ­anti-Semitism in early-20th-century America. Both prejudices racialized non-Protestant groups. But Painter ­misses some crucial regional differences. While Jews and Italians were nonwhite in the East, they had long been white in San Francisco, where the racial “inferiors” were the Chinese. Although the United States census categorized ­Mexican-Americans as white through 1930, census enumerators in the Southwest, working from a different racial under­standing, ignored those instructions and marked them “M” for Mexican.

In the same period, anarchist or socialist beliefs became a sign of racial inferiority, a premise strengthened by the presence of many immigrants and Jews among early-20th-century radicals. Whiteness thus became a method of stigmatizing dissenting ideas, a marker of ideological respectability; Painter should have investigated this phenomenon further. Also missing from the book is an analysis of the all-important question: Who benefits and how from the imprimatur of whiteness? Political elites and employers of low-wage labor, to choose just two groups, actively policed the boundaries of whiteness.

But I cannot fault Nell Painter’s choices — omissions to keep a book widely readable. Often, scholarly interpretation is transmitted through textbooks that oversimplify and even bore their readers with vague generalities. Far better for a large audience to learn about whiteness from a distinguished scholar in an insightful and lively exposition.

 

Linda Gordon is a professor of history at New York University and the author, most recently, of “Dorothea Lange: A Life Beyond Limits.”

 

EVENT: New York City—Adam Habib on Social Movements « from AFRICA IS A COUNTRY

Adam Habib on Social Movements

March 26, 2010 · Leave a Comment

Remember Adam Habib, the South African political commentator, who on his last trip to the United States in 2007 was declared a terrorist, refused entry and put on a plane back to South Africa? He was never told what he did wrong (he was a vocal critic of the US occupation in Iraq). Now the ban has been lifted. So on April 7th, he’ll be in New York City and will give a talk at his alma mater, the City University of New York.

The details of the talk:

POLITICS AND SOCIAL MOVEMENTS IN SOUTH AFRICA TODAY

Political Science Lounge, 5200.00

Wednesday, April 7, 2010 6:15-8:00
Co-sponsored by the Center for Place, Culture and Politics

CUNY Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Ave. @ 34th Street.

INFO: Nigeria: The Versatility of Pidgin English >from A BOMBASTIC ELEMENT

Monday, March 29, 2010

Nigeria: The Versatility of Pidgin English

Reuters African journal takes a look at Nigerian pidgin English as the ligua franca for the presenters and listeners of the Nigerian radio station, Wazobia FM 95.1:

According to Nigerian Pidgin Language Bible (NPLB) translators, there are 29 letters in the pidgin English alphabet and though the versatility of the language or diversity among its speakers comes as no surprise to anyone, still, translating the bible into pidgin comes off as a mindblowin' feat. For example, any English speaker should just stare for while at the first 6 verses of John Chapter 1 and it should begin to make sense:

1. Fọ stat ọf ẹvritin di Wọn wee bi di Wọd bin dee. Di Wọd bin dee togẹda wit Gọd, an di Wọd na Gọd. 2. Di Wọd bin dee togẹda wit Gọd fọ stat ọf ẹvritin. 3. Gọd yuz di Wọd fọ mek ọl tins. An Gọd no mek enitin witaut di Wọd. 4. Laif bin kọm frọm di Wọd, an dis laif bi lait fọ pipul.5. Di lait de shain insaid daknẹs, an daknẹs no fit kwẹnch am. 6. Wọn man dee, wee Gọd sẹnd. Di man nem na Jọn.
Or
1. In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2 He was in the beginning with God. 3 All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. 4. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men. 5. And the light shines in the darkness, and the darkness did not comprehend it. 6 There was a man sent from God, whose name was John.

 

EVENT: Trenton, NJ - OASIS IN THE DESERT@CAFE INTERNATIONAL

OASIS IN THE DESERT@CAFE INTERNATIONAL

Type:
Start Time:
Saturday, April 10, 2010 at 8:00pm
End Time:
Sunday, April 11, 2010 at 12:00am
Location:
241 EAST FRONT STREET,..TRENTON NJ

Description

The MIC will be open..The HOST will be GRACIOUS,..the FOOD will be DELICIOUS ,..the BAND will be SWINGING,..the POETS will be SHARP,..the MAGIC MAN will be AMAAAAZING,... and of course YOU will be in the house to make the VIBE JUST RIGHT.

It is a POETIC_ MUSICAL_VISUAL_ MAGICAL ENSEMBLE. It is a collective of SPOKEN WORD ARTISTS, a Banging HOUSE BAND, OPEN MIC and one Amaaaazing MAGICIAN. HOSTED by SISTER SABREE of CULTURAL CONCEPTS TRENTON NJ, who sets the tone for the evening with her WARM VIBRATION and her Delightful POETIC Presentation. Through Poems and Songs she spins a vibrant Mosaic of GOLDEN RHYMES,..Ancient Rythyms and NEW AGE JAZZ. The OASIS IN THE DESERT HOUSE BAND is all that and more. From the laid back groove to the upbeat bang these musical cats are right on time. Add to that the Lyricists and Spoken Word Artist POLO POET from Trenton, N.J and all kinds of Artistic Good Things begin to happen. The man has Rythym-n-Rhyme. Check this, The UNKNOWN POET and QUEEN are on the scene planting Seeds of Musical Inspiration and dropping those Poetic Duets as only they can do.Through their Poems and Songs they light up the atmosphere and lift us to new heights of lyrical appreciation. If that is not enough for one entertaining evening, there is One AMAAAAZING MAGIC MAN that is making OASIS IN THE DESERT his artistic home. And when I say AMAAAAZING, I ain't lying ya'll. This man is that Good and every Illussion is up close and personal, in short sleeves,...no special affects,...in your face. TOE_KNEE_STREET MAGIC AT ITS FINEST will have you saying WOW,... WOW,...WOW. Add to this an OPEN MIC that attracts the Best Eclectic mix of Talent and Artistry this side of New York and Philly. This show, lady's and gentlemen raises the bar in the City of Trenton to New Artistic Heights. So if you gonna Bless the OPEN MIC you better bring your best material, cause this OASIS IN THE DESERT @ CAFE INTERNATIONAL is ALL THAT. This ENSEMBLE is also willing and able to work with any outside people or agencys with the similar goal of raising the Artistic and Cultural bar in inner city Trenton NJ and the Mercer area. This venue is every 2nd saturday of the month at CAFE INTERNATIONAL 241 EAST FRONT STREET TRENTON, NJ...( 8pm to 12am ) doors open 7pm ( so come early to get a cozy seat ).

 

EVENT: New York City—Writers for Mumia

On Behalf of Mumia Abu-Jamal

 

Attention All Writers:

 

In celebrating Mumia's birthdate (April 24, 1954), the New York Coalition to Free Mumia Abu-Jamal and the National Writers Union (NWU/New York Chapter) are organizing Writers for Mumia, an afternoon of readings and testimonials taking place Saturday, April 24, at St. Mary's Church, 512 West 126 Street, between Old Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue, in Harlem.

Interested writers should immediately contact Louis Reyes Rivera via email at  (Louisreyesrivera@aol.com) or Susan E. Davis [sednyc@earthlink.net] in order to be included in the program, scheduled from 2 to 6 p.m. at St. Mary's Church.

The event immediately precedes a rally scheduled for Monday, April 26, in front of the Justice Department's headquarters in Washington, D.C.

Initiated in 1999 as a project of the International Action Center, Writers for Mumia is a way for authors to show their support for the imprisoned journalist and honorary member of the NWU. It has since become an outpouring by writers weighing in against the death penalty and on behalf of Mumia's right to a new trial. In addition to cultural presentations, the April 24th program includes Pam Africa of the International Friends and Family of Mumia Abu-Jamal and Suzanne Ross of the New York Coalition to Free Mumia.

 

Quick Update:

Mumia Abu-Jamal now faces a most critical moment in his decades-long struggle to be granted a new trial based on solid, incontrovertible evidence of prosecutorial misconduct during the criminal court trial that led to his conviction on charges of killing a Philadelphia police officer.

 

This past January, the Supreme Court overturned the Third Circuit Court of Appeals' 2008 decision to set aside the death penalty based on improper instructions given to the jurors. Instead, the high court has instructed the circuit court to "reconsider" its earlier decision, particularly reinstitution of the death penalty. What the Supreme Court refused to weigh in on was the defense's arguments calling for a new trial and drawing attention to prosecutorial misconduct, including the deliberate exclusion of eligible Black jurors.

PUB: Special issue of Valley Voices: A Literary Review

Dear Colleagues,

 

I am less than sanguine regarding restrictions the idea of a canon imposes on a vibrant African American literary tradition, and I suspect the practice of the canon does as much harm as good in helping us to address multi-layered problems of literacy.  Good fortune and John Zheng, editor of Valley Voices, have provided an opportunity to address these concerns in a 2011 special issue. The strategy I have chosen is to call for articles that give attention to writers whose names and works are unlikely to occur in privileged academic criticism and theory.

 

I would very much appreciate your sharing my call for papers with literary thinkers who might be interested in exploring works by the writers listed or by other writers in the tradition who challenge the notion of a canon.

 

All best wishes,

 

Jerry W. Ward, Jr.

 

 

CALL FOR PAPERS 

Jerry W. Ward, Jr., Professor of English at Dillard University, will guest-edit the Fall 2011 issue of Valley Voices: A Literary Review on the African American literary tradition and the idea of a canon.

Articles will focus on the works of writers who have not been frequently discussed.

Ward invites original articles ranging from 15 to 20 pages, using MLA documentation, on such writers as Sandra Jackson-Opoku, Eugene Redmond, Tom Dent,  Honorée  Fannone  Jeffers, Sarah Webster Fabio, Thulani  Davis,  John A. Williams, Wanda Coleman, Henry Dumas,  E. Ethelbert Miller,  Arthenia  Bates Millican, Olympia Vernon,  Kalamu ya Salaam, Angela Jackson,  Joyce Carol Thomas,  Haki Madhubuti, Carl Hancock Rux,  Mildred Taylor , Askia Muhammad Toure, and others.  Potential contributors should email an abstract  of  the article to  Ward prior to submission.

Send submissions  and a biographical note of no more than 250 words as PDF or Microsoft Word 2007 files to jerry.ward31@hotmail.com by February 1, 2011.