VIDEO: Samuel L. Jackson versus Mitt Romney

Samuel L. Jackson's

Wake The F*ck Up Ad


Samuel L Jackson " Wake The F*ck UP " Vulgar Dr. Seuss Obama Ad President Barack Obama 2012. Actor Samuel L. Jackson entered the political fray this week, starring in a new web video that parodies his own audio recording of the mock children's book, "Go the F*** to Sleep."

This time, however, Jackson is reaching out to voters--not frustrated parents--urging Americans to "Wake the F*** Up" and vote for President Barack Obama. (Obviously, not work safe without headphones, but there's also a bleeped version.) In the nearly four-minute video told like a children's book, Jackson narrates a metrical tale of disenchanted Obama fans who have since dialed down their support.

 

 

 

__________________________

 

TA-NEHISI COATES - Ta-Nehisi Coates is a senior editor at The Atlantic, where he writes about culture, politics, and social issues for TheAtlantic.com and the magazine. He is the author of the memoir The Beautiful Struggle.

Mitt Romney, in His Own Words

 

 

Molly Ball reports that this ad is playing in Ohio with some regularity. The tough thing about the 47 percent tape is, it isn't a gaffe. It isn't a misstatement. It's a coherent, if amoral, argument, delivered with force and clarity. It doesn't really require being taken out of context. You can just run Romney in his own words. 

I would not be surprised if Mitt Romney had a few good debates. And it is certainly true that it's possible for a candidate in this position to execute what would be a historic comeback. But it is not very likely. It is even less likely when the politician isn't very good at the job. The 47 percent tape would be devastating for any politician. But it is especially devastating for Mitt Romney. 

Meanwhile, the always (and appropriately) cautious Nate Silver reports that "Mitt Romney had one of his worst polling days of the year on Wednesday." Claiming the 47 percent tape is a "golden opportunity" is like claiming you had a heart attack on purpose.

ALSO: Running on Bain was right.

 

 

 

 

VIDEO: Who is Albizu Campos? by Michael Torres > Kickstarter

A feature length documentary

on Puerto Rican revolutionary

Pedro Albizu Campos.

  • Launched: Sep 12, 2012
  • Funding ends: Oct 9, 2012
  • Don't want to forget? We'll remind you by email 48 hours before funding ends.

 

The Story

Patriot – Fascist – Criminal – Saint  – All have been used to describe Puerto Rican Revolutionary Pedro Albizu Campos. 'Who is Albizu Campos?' is the first feature length documentary to tell the life story of this charismatic leader who became the most polarizing figure in Puerto Rican history.

Unwavering audacity, intense political passion, fierce national pride – Pedro Albizu Campos had all the makings of a classic 20th century revolutionary. As President of the Puerto Rican Nationalist Party, he championed social justice, defied colonial rule, and galvanized Puerto Rico’s fight for independence from the United States. Revered by Che Guevara as “a symbol of the yet un-free but indomitable Latin America,” and auspiciously tagged a “Puerto Rican Malcolm X,” by as early 1933, “El Maestro,” (the Teacher, as he was commonly known), was a veritable public enemy in the United States. Despite a Harvard education and military service during World War I, Albizu was condemned a criminal in Washington, labeled a terrorist by the CIA and spent over 25 years of his life in prison, never compromising his vision of a free and sovereign Puerto Rico.

In scene after incredible scene we discover what compelled Albizu to challenge the American occupation of Puerto Rico while wrestling with his own sense of moral outrage, and the crushing consequences that followed. The story of Pedro Albizu Campos is one of the quintessential stories of the Americas.  His struggle for a free Puerto Rico encapsulates Latin America’s struggle for self-determination and self-reliance from foreign interests. Yet today his story is virtually unknown.

Despite the immensity of Albizu Campos’ legacy and the impact that he had in the United States and Puerto Rico, there are no English language books currently in circulation about the subject. This project will be a main source of information for an entire generation of English speaking Latinos, public school educators, and political science, history and sociology students of every level.

Background

Since starting this project in 2006, I’ve interviewed over 20 scholars, historians, associates and family members of Albizu and have taken research trips to Harvard, New York and Puerto Rico, accumulating over 100 hours of interviews, archival footage, hundreds of unpublished photos, rare radio interviews and original speeches given by Albizu. These materials have been assembled into a three-hour rough cut which needs to be edited down to ninety minutes.

Support for the Film

The project has been supported and invited to workshops from Film Independents Project Involve, The Corporation of Public Broadcasting's Producer's Academy and the National Association of Latino Independent Producers Latino Producer's Academy and has received small development grants from Latino Public Broadcasting and International Television Services (ITVS).

How Your Contributions Will Be Used

The funds raised from this campaign will go directly to the final stage of production in which we will create the visual style of the film by assembling a team to produce the animated sequences of the film. These funds will also contribute to the editing of the film which begins when I return from Puerto Rico in December.

Our goal is to raise $27,000 by midnight October 9th.  Kickstarter only works if we reach our goal—If we don’t hit our target, we don’t get any of the money.

Even $5 helps! 

Other Ways You Can Help us Finish the Film!

Please help us spread the word by Posting our Kickstarter link on your Facebook and Twitter accounts—this doesn’t cost you a thing, and goes a long way towards helping us spread the word.

Also please "LIKE" us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter and join our mailing list at whoisalbizu.com for regular updates on the film.

Thank you for your continued support. 

Peace and Blessings,

Michael

 

HISTORY + VIDEO: The largest working class uprising in US history (and you’ve probably never even heard of it) > Dangerous Minds

The largest

working class uprising

in US history

(and you’ve

probably never

even heard of it)

 

08.28.2012


 
Saturday I received an email fundraising letter from former and hopefully future member of Congress, Alan Grayson of Florida. As readers of this blog know, I absolutely despise Republicans and about the best I can say about the Democrats is that I don’t hate them—I have almost no feelings about them whatsoever, although I always vote a straight Democratic ticket. But Alan Grayson is different and I like and admire him very much. He’s pretty much only slightly more of a Democrat than Vermont’s Bernie Sanders is (Sanders is an Independent/Socialist), and this is probably why I like him so much. Grayson’s about as far to the left as you can get and still be considered a Democrat.

In any case, in this weekend’s fundraising letter, reproduced here in full, Grayson tells the story of the “Battle of Blair Mountain,” the largest armed confrontation in the US since the Civil War. I was astonished to read about this. For one, I’d never even heard of it. Two, this happened in West Virginia, the state where I was born and raised. Every 8th grader—at least when I was in school, but I would imagine that this would still be the case—has to take a full year of “West Virginia History.” How was something like this basically erased from the history books, even on a local level like that?

What we are taught is “American history” is BUNK when things like the Battle of Blair Mountain are left out!

From Alan Grayson’s email:

This weekend marks the anniversary of the most brutal confrontation in the history of the American labor movement, the Battle of Blair Mountain. For one week during 1921, armed, striking coal miners battled scabs, a private militia, police officers and the US Army. 100 people died, 1,000 were arrested, and one million shots were fired. It was the largest armed rebellion in America since the Civil War.

This is how it happened. In the Twenties, West Virginia coal miners lived in “company towns.” The mining companies owned all the property. They literally ran union organizers out of town - or killed them.

In 1912, in a strike at Paint Creek, the mining company forced the striking miners and their families out of their homes, to live in tents. Then they sent armed goons into that tent city, and opened fire on men, women and children there with a machine gun.

By 1920, the United Mine Workers had organized the northern mines in West Virginia, but they were barred from the southern mines. When southern miners tried to join the union, they were fired and evicted. To show who was boss, one mining company tried to place machine guns on the roofs of buildings in town.

In Matewan, when the coal company goons came to town to take it upon themselves to enforce eviction notices, the mayor and the sheriff asked them to leave. The goons refused. Incredibly, the goons tried to arrest the sheriff, Sheriff Hatfield. Shots were fired, and the mayor and nine others were killed. But the company goons had to flee.

The government sided with the coal companies, and put Sheriff Hatfield on trial for murder. The jury acquitted him. Then they put the sheriff on trial for supposedly dynamiting a non-union mine. As the sheriff walked up the courthouse steps to stand trial again, unarmed, company goons shot him in cold blood. In front of his wife.

This led to open confrontations between miners on one hand, and police and company goons on the other. 13,000 armed miners assembled, and marched on the southern mines in Logan and Mingo Counties. They confronted a private militia of 2,000, hired by the coal companies.

President Harding was informed. He threatened to send in troops and even bombers to break the union. Many miners turned back, but then company goons started killing unarmed union men, and some armed miners pushed on. The militia attacked armed miners, and the coal companies hired airplanes to drop bombs on them. The US Army Air Force, as it was known then, observed the miners’ positions from overhead, and passed that information on to the coal companies.

The miners actually broke through the militia’s defensive perimeter, but after five days, the US Army intervened, and the miners stood down. By that time, 100 people were dead. Almost a thousand miners then were indicted for murder and treason. No one on the side of the coal companies was ever held accountable.

The Battle of Blair Mountain showed that the miners could not defeat the coal companies and the government in battle. But then something interesting happened: the miners defeated the coal companies and the government at the ballot box. In 1925, convicted miners were paroled. In 1932, Democrats won both the State House and the White House. In 1935, President Roosevelt signed the National Labor Relations Act. Eleven years after the Battle of Blair Mountain, the United Mine Workers organized the southern coal fields in West Virginia.

The Battle of Blair Mountain did not have a happy ending for Sheriff Hatfield, or his wife, or the 100 men, women and children who died, or the hundreds who were injured, or the thousands who lost their jobs. But it did have a happy ending for the right to organize, and the middle class, and America.

Now let me ask you one thing: had you ever heard of this landmark event in American history, the Battle of Blair Mountain, before you read this? And if not, then why not? Think about that.

Courage,

Alan Grayson

Makes you wonder what would Christian “historian” David Barton and the “Tea party patriot” set make of this? How would they even get their heads around it?

Donate to Alan Grayson’s political campaign here.
 

 
The Battle of Blair Mountain by Chris Hedges

The Battle of Blair Mountain, Round Two (Mother Jones)

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Posted by Richard Metzger

 

 

VIDEO + INTERVIEW: CAMP MULLA > The Urbane Mix

The Urbane Mix Interview:

CAMP MULLA

Posted by Eromo Egbejule

Posted on 21-05-2012

Camp Mulla is one of the hottest musical properties in Africa as of this moment. Consisting of five vibrant young people based in Nairobi, Kenya, the group has managed to capture the hearts and minds of the average twenty-something across Africa with their new age sounds, in a very short time. They have also gotten some international acclaim with their videos being aired on popular American TV station, BET. On the back of two widely popular singles, their music has spread fast across Africa and beyond, slowly but surely identifying them new face of their genre (hip-pop) in Africa. The Urbane Mix had the pleasure of interviewing these new kids on the block…

 

 How and when was Camp Mulla formed? How many group members are there?

Camp Mulla was formed sometime in mid-2010. We came to be thanks to the same circle of friends we had who introduced us and since then, we’ve been inseparable. Camp Mulla has five members: Tai Tripper, Young Kass, the First Lady of the camp: Miss Karun, K’ cous the producer and Mikie Tuchi the hype man

 

The stage name, Camp Mulla, is rather interesting. What’s the origin?

‘Camp’ comes from the fact we are a united group of young people who are musically driven. And this is not just a hobby but a career path. Money is an important factor and part of our music. So we decided to combine both and thus we had: CAMP MULLA

 

What’s your inspiration? What driving force is behind Camp Mulla?

Success; the ability of breaking barriers and making history in Africa. Also knowing that all is possible when you put in hardwork, talent and creativity.

 

What is your genre of music?

Well to us, we prefer not to label our music or confine it to one genre as music is a never-ending evolution. However, for the sake of specification, we could say that it’s “Hip-pop”/ New-age.

 

 What is the 2-5-Flow all about?

2-5-Flow or 2-5-4 (which is associated with the Kenyan telecode) is about gaining exposure for new and upcoming Kenyan emcees and a movement of rappers as well.

 

 The word “swag” comes up a lot in your music. Why is this so?

Hahaha. Well it’s just about being young and enjoying it while combining good fashion and personal style. That’s why all we know is Swagger and we keep it fresh all day!!!

 

 You are being managed by a Nigerian and you’ve worked with popular Nigerian video director, Clarence Peters. Any chance you’ll work with Nigerian artistes very soon? Name names.

Watch the space…. You never know

 

What projects are you working on? What are we to expect from Camp Mulla?

 

Well, we are mastering our debut album which we are very excited about. Also, our fourth video and our fifth single are due for release soon.

 

Karun, how do you cope with these three guys? Do they bully you?

 

Hahahaha, not at all. The guys are quiet and nice to me. In fact, sometimes it’s like I’m one of them. We are not just colleagues but more like a big family. I just happen to be the only girl.  :D

Most musical crews split up after a while eventually. Do you think this could ever be the case with this group? Can Camp Mulla make it far without a breakup?

 

Disagreements are common and healthy among people who work together. We as Camp Mulla believe that we shall be able to overcome any issues that may arise in the future and avoid a break up.

What else does Camp Mulla, asides music?

 

We are all still in school.

In the coming years, you guys hope to achieve?

 

We hope to become one of the biggest group in Africa and have worldwide recognition.

 

 

PHOTO CREDIT: CAMP MULLA

__________________________

 Audio: Camp Mulla x Wizkid ‘Prices’

[Download]

 

camp-mulla-wizkid-prices-download

Nairobi’s buzzing youngsters Camp Mulla team up with EME all-star Wizkid for the synth-pop breeze of “Prices,” the latest single off the Camp Mulla’s debut full-length FuNKYToWN. For better or worse (depending on your bag) the flows, beat and message are an unapologetic parallel of mainstream American rap. There’s no denying the hit-potential here though. Stream “Prices” below.

>via: http://www.okayafrica.com/2012/09/26/camp-mulla-wizkid-prices-download/

__________________________

 

 

 

 

 

PUB: Call for Book Chapters: Africa and its Animals > Writers Afrika

Call for Book Chapters:
Africa and its Animals

Deadline: 31 March 2013

As societies grow closer together in an ever more globalized world, our awareness of environmental and socioeconomic concerns has vastly increased. As a result, missions and programs in African countries have worked to address deficiencies in human healthcare, education, and poverty, striving to provide a better life for millions of human beings.

Surprisingly little attention, however, has been given to the wellbeing of the countless non-human animals in their midst. Suffering from human cruelty, starvation, injury, and neglect, these animals interact with Africans every day, yet have been overlooked by those seeking to improve conditions on the continent. While our concern for humanity worldwide has expanded, our concern for the sufferings of animals has changed very little.

To directly address this lack of attention to a vital part of the African community, we propose an anthology that comprehensively analyzes the major ways in which non-human animals impact, are a part of and are affected by African societies. By understanding the social, cultural, and legal status of non-human animals in African societies and addressing issues such us, but not limited to, African philosophy, animal use in Africa, African wildlife, animal advocacy, religion, art and globalization, we can lay the foundation for addressing animal protection concerns on the continent. Far from being of secondary importance, animals are essential to the everyday lives of Africans, helping them to work and live out their daily existence. As cohabitants of the same environment, their wellbeing is essential to the health and improvement of human beings and vice versa. Therefore, those who work towards a better Africa must not only envision the greater prosperity of Africans, but also address the livelihood of animals as vital members of society.

IMPORTANT DATES:

  • Chapter proposals (2-4 pages, double-spaced) due: March 31, 2013

  • Notification of acceptance: April 15, 2013

  • Chapters due: October 1, 2013
OBJECTIVES OF THE BOOK:

Most people, even those familiar with African society or culture, have a very human-centric view and understanding of Africa and its inhabitants. They hear of the human suffering, the abject poverty of her people, and the enormous health and environmental challenges her people face each day, but have little or no awareness of the existence of animals in their midst. Forgotten are the non-human cohabitants of this vast and majestic continent, their trials and tribulations, their daily challenges to survive under harsh conditions caused by human indifference and cruelty, and their vulnerability in the face of mother nature.

This book intends to correct this gap by accomplishing the following:

  • Bringing light to the myriad ways in which non-human animals contribute to African society and showing their importance as members of this vast continent

  • Exposing animals’ suffering at the hands of humans and explaining what is being done, and what needs to be done, to protect them

  • Shifting the common view of animals as second-class members of our world to one which recognizes the symbiotic relationship between humans and non-humans, and explaining how this relationship is interwoven and embedded in African culture, philosophy, and art

  • Creating a comprehensive source of information and inspiration for academics, students, policy makers, NGO workers and others dealing with, or interested in, animals in Africa
RECOMMENDED TOPICS:

Possible themes and topics include, but are not be limited to:

Animals and Philosophy in Africa

  • Animals in African Philosophy: How are animals viewed in indigenous African philosophical thought? What do contemporary African philosophers, and African sages, think about the moral status of non-human animals?

  • African animal ethicists: Who are the most renowned animal ethicists in Africa? What are their views on how we ought to treat animals? What kinds of theories are they defending? What are their biographies?

  • Animal ethics in higher education: Are there degree programs in Africa with a particular focus on animal ethics? Which African philosophy departments offer courses on animal ethics? Is animal ethics part of the ethics curriculum at African universities? How is animal ethics taught in Africa?
Animals in African Law
  • Existing animal legislation in Africa: What is the status of non-human animals in African legislations? Which legislations do have animal welfare laws? Are there criminal provisions against animal cruelty?

  • Current trends in African policy making concerning animals: Are there efforts to change existing legislation concerning animals? What are the perspectives for legal animal rights in Africa?
Animal Use in Africa
  • Traditional animal agriculture in Africa: What methods are traditionally employed for the slaughter of animals? How are animals in Africa traditionally raised and kept?

  • Hunting and poaching in Africa: What is the history of hunting and poaching in Africa? How do African governments deal with poaching? To what extend is poaching a problem in which countries?

  • The industrialization of the African food animal industry: How did the industrialization of the African food animal industry begin? Which countries already industrialized a significant part of their meat, egg and diary production? Which countries are next? What are the conditions in African factory farms like for the animals? Are there animal welfare standards for factory farming? Who is making sure these standards are met?

  • Working animals in Africa: What kinds of animals are used for work in Africa? What kinds of work are animals doing? What is the history of working animals in Africa?

  • Animal experimentation in Africa: Which African countries engage in animal research? What are current examples of animal experimentation in Africa? What is the history of animal experimentation in Africa? Is the trend towards using more or less animals in research?

  • African zoos: What are the conditions like for animals in African zoos? What is the history of zoos in Africa?

  • Economic aspects of animal use in Africa: To which extend do the livelihoods of African depend on what use of animals?
Environment and African Wildlife
  • International and national conservation efforts: What strategies do international as well as national NGOs employ in their conservation efforts in Africa? What is the role of African governments in this?

  • Wildlife management in Africa: How and to what extend do African governments regulate wildlife?

  • The impact of factory farming on the environment: How does the rise of factory farming in Africa affect the environment?

  • Human population growth, industry, environmental damage and African wildlife: How do human population growth, modernization and environmental damage affect wildlife in Africa?
Animals and African Civil Society
  • NGOs seeking to improve animal welfare in Africa: Which NGOs are there? What is their history? Are there notable differences between African NGOs and those from another continent?

  • Public opinions towards animals: Is there any sociological data about public opinion towards animals in Africa? How frequently does the media address issues that relate to animals? Is there public concern over animal cruelty? Have there been significant public outcries over particular cases of animal cruelty?
Animals and Religion in Africa
  • Religious provisions concerning animals: What do the teachings of major religions in Africa, such as Christianity and Islam, say about how we ought to treat animals? What is the status of animals in traditional African religions?

  • Religious animal sacrifice in Africa: How prevalent is animal sacrifice in Africa? In which contexts does it occur? Is there opposition to the practice among Africans? What is the history of animal sacrifice in Africa?
Animals in African Society, Culture and Art
  • The status of animals in traditional and contemporary African societies: What is the status of animals in traditional and modern African communities and families? How do Africans traditionally perceive their own humanity in comparison or contrast to the nature of other animals? Is caring for animals a Eurocentric phenomenon, or does it also exist in African culture? Did colonialism change the attitudes of Africans toward non-human animals? To what extent is masculinity associated with meat eating among Africa’s ethnic groups? Is there awareness in contemporary African societies about the interrelation between the food animal industry, environmental damage and food insecurity?

  • Animals in African art: How does African art represent animals? Are there popular themes in African art that relate to animals? How is the relation of humans and other animals depicted in African art?

  • Africans and companion animals: What is the history of pets in Africa? How prevalent is pet-keeping in which parts of Africa? What are common attitudes towards pets in Africa? How do African governments deal with stray pets?

  • Animals and public health: What are the effects of zoonotic diseases on animal health and human health? How does the consumption of meat, eggs and dairy affect the health of Africans?

  • African diets: What do people in which African communities traditionally eat? What is the status of meat in African diets? Are there prejudices against vegetarian and vegan diets? What is the history and current status of groups advocating vegetarian and vegan lifestyles in Africa?
Africa's Animals in a Global Context
  • Animal-related international policies and agreements: What international policies and agreements relating to animals are there? How do they affect animal well-being in Africa? What are the current trends in international policy-making concerning animals in Africa?

  • Animals in a globalized economy: How does the global economy affect the well-being of animals in Africa? What are the current trends in land leasing? Which countries are affected in what way?
Animal Rights vs. Human Rights
  • Is animal rights a Western idea? Can the idea of animal rights be found in traditional African thought or is it essentially Western?

  • Are animal rights possible in Africa? Is concern for animal rights a privileged concern or is it a concern for people of all socio-economic backgrounds? What are the prospects for animal rights in Africa? Are animal rights possible in communities that essentially depend on animal agriculture?

  • Hunger and meat consumption: What is the relation between hunger, malnutrition and the consumption of meat?
SUBMISSION PROCEDURE:

Researchers, government workers, activists, religious scholars and others with expertise in matters that relate to animals in Africa are invited to submit on or before March 31, 2013, a 2-4 page chapter proposal (double-spaced) clearly explaining the mission and concerns of the proposed chapter. Proposals should be written in English. Authors will be notified by April 15, 2013 about the status of their proposals and, in case of acceptance, sent chapter guidelines. Full chapters are expected to be submitted by October 1, 2013. All submitted chapters will be reviewed, and authors might be asked to revise and resubmit their chapters.

Your chapter proposal should be accompanied by a separate file containing your
professional biography (300-600 words) and your contact information (affiliation, address, telephone number, and e-mail address). Please also mention some key publications.

Please submit your abstract, by March 31, 2013, and direct all questions to roba@ifundafrica.org and rainerebert@gmail.com. When submitting your abstract, please include your surname and "Africa and Its Animals abstract" in the subject line of your e-mail message.

All proceeds of this book will be donated to the International Fund for Africa, a non-profit organization dedicated to preventing, alleviating, and abolishing suffering of human and non-human animals in Africa.

CONTACT INFORMATION:

For queries/ submissions: roba@ifundafrica.org and rainerebert@gmail.com

Website: http://www.ifundafrica.org/

 

 

PUB: Cutthroat Contest

The 2012 Joy Harjo Poetry Award
& the Rick DeMarinis Short Story Award:

             **First Prize in each genre: $1250 and publication.**

             **Second Prize in each genre: $250 and publication. **
                          **Honorable Mention:  Publication.**
           
                                           2012 JUDGES:
                          LINDA GREGERSON, Joy Harjo Poetry Prize
                  CHARLES BAXTER, Rick DeMarinis Short Fiction Prize

Submit up to three unpublished poems (100 line limit each) or one unpublished short story (5000 word limit), any subject, any style, postmarked between July 15 and October 10, 2012.  Winners announced in late December  2012. MAIL:  Author name must not appear anywhere on manuscript.  Include a cover sheet with name, address, phone, email, genre and title(s). MUST include SASE for announcement of winners. A stamped postcard for receipt of ms. is optional.  Manuscripts must be in 12 point font. All paper manuscripts are recycled.  DO NOT STAPLE STORIES OR POEMS!  Submit as often as you wish  (online and
mail). Simultaneous submissions are accepted as long as the writer
informs us immediately when a piece is accepted elsewhere.  There is a
$17.00 nonrefundable reading fee per submission (1 story or 3 poems)
for all entries.  Make checks payable to Raven's Word Writers.

ONLINE ENTRIES:  Do not include a cover sheet. AUTHOR  NAME MUST NOT APPEAR ON MS!  There is a $17 entry fee. You will be instructed how to pay this by our submission service. Fiction must be double-spaced. No relatives of or employees of CUTTHROAT, no friends or students of judges are eligible for these prizes. No stories or poems that have been published or have won contests are eligible. All finalists are acknowledged in CUTTHROAT & considered for publication.  Winners announced in POETS & WRITERS, WINNING WRITERS and the AWP Chronicle. THANK YOU TO ALL WRITERS WHO SUBMITTED LAST YEAR.

Mail manuscripts to: 

CUTTHROAT Literary Award
(specify genre)

P.O. Box 2414

Durango, CO 81302

For more information call 1-970-903-7914 or email us >cutthroatmag@gmail.com

 

PUB: American Literary Review - Contest

2012 Literary awards

Contest Guidelines

Please note that we do not accept submissions via email.  Please submit your work through our online Submission Manager or via regular mail. We also do not accept any previously published work, including online publication and "revised" or altered versions of stories, poems, or essays.  

See a list of past winners and runners-up.  

  • Three prizes of $1,000 each and publication in the Spring 2013 issue of the American Literary Review will be given for a poem, a short story, and an essay.

    For online entries:

  • Submit up to three poems, a short story of up to 8,000 words, or an essay of
    up to 6,500 words with a $15 entry fee between June 1 and October 1, 2012 by using our online Submission Manager.
  • Please do not put any identifying information in the file itself; include your cover letter in the box provided.
  • Short Fiction: One work of fiction per entry ($15), limit 8,000 words per work.
  • Creative Nonfiction: One work per entry fee, limit 6,500 words per work.
  • Poetry: Entry fee covers up to three poems (i.e. one to three poems would require an entry fee of $15; four to six poems would be $30, and so on).

    For mailed entries:

  • Submit up to three poems, a short story of up to 8,000 words, or an essay of up to 6,500 words with a $15 entry fee between June 1 and October 1, 2012. Make checks payable to American Literary Review. Entries submitted before June 1 or after October 1 will be returned unread.
  • Include a cover page with author's name, title(s), address, and phone number.
    Do not include any identifying information on subsequent pages except for the
    title of the work.
  • Enclose a $15.00 reading fee (includes subscription) and a SASE for contest
    results. Multiple entries are acceptable; however each entry must be accompanied
    by a reading fee. (Note: only the initial entry fee includes a subscription.
    Subsequent entry fees go to contest costs only and will not extend the subscription.) Make checks payable to American Literary Review.
  • Short Fiction: One work of fiction per entry ($15), limit 8,000 words per work.
  • Creative Nonfiction: One work per entry fee, limit 6,500 words per work.
  • Poetry: Entry fee covers up to three poems (i.e. one to three poems would
    require an entry fee of $15; four to six poems would be $30, and so on).
  • Label entries according to contest genre and mail to ALR's regular submission address:


    For example: American Literary Review Short Fiction Contest
                        P.O. Box 311307
                        University of North Texas
                        Denton, TX 76203-1307

 

INTERVIEW + VIDEO: Kara Walker - You and I, us artists > Dust Tracks On a Road

KARA WALKER
"…You and I, us artists are victim of a mass delusion that to make and to pursue personal and intellectual freedom amounts to a greater good in the world.. or even to ourselves. How many of us are truly happy and fulfilled? Are we engaged in healthy love relationships? Have we resolved our familial issues? Do we always need this crutch of visual culture to wake us up and turn us on? Making art only increases the desire to make more art. We become like inhalant megalomaniacs in constant pursuit of the now, the it, the fresh, the new, the pure, the clean, the right, the best, the correct, the balanced, the real, the mean, the most, the biggest, the most powerful, the space, the time, the most, the mini, the great, the good, the blackest, the ethnic, the human, the machine, the end all, the be all."

__________________________

 

__________________________

 

BOMB 100/Summer 2007 cover 

(InterviewPainting)

Walker16.jpg
Kara Walker, Untitled, 1996, cut paper, watercolor, and graphite on canvas, 69½ x 66”. All images courtesy of the artist and Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York.

I’ve been thinking about Kara Walker’s work for a long time. Two years ago, a bleeding barn from one of her watercolors appeared in one of my poems. About a month ago I finished writing a book of poems, Modern Life, which is populated by catgoats and centaurs, civilians and soldiers, and I found myself wanting to talk to her. Who better to ask about the division/fusion of past and present, how to live in the middle of “yes” and “no,” where the real and imagined intersect?

People have been paying attention—both positive and negative—to Walker’s work since she became one of the youngest artists to receive a MacArthur Foundation “genius” fellowship, in 1997. Perhaps that is only fitting, because Walker is certainly paying attention as she cuts along the dotted lines of race and gender, manipulates paper marionettes on film, and conjures the gray area as she types in black ink on white paper. The world, as seen through Walker’s eyes, is tragicomic, pornographic. She asks her audience to perch on hyphens, slide down slashes—and when we emerge, we have a bristling intuition of boundaries and stereotypes that is entirely new.

This year a traveling retrospective takes the measure of her drawings, paintings, installations, and the cutout silhouettes for which she is best known, as well as the films that she has added to her repertoire in the last few years. Organized by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis,Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love, opens at the Whitney Museum of Anerican Art, New York, in October and travels to the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, in February 2008.

 


Matthea Harvey Let’s talk about hybrids. In your work, you have white swans with human heads—

Kara Walker The swans with the black heads came very organically. I was thinking about objects of beauty and destruction. I first used them in a piece meant to be a comment on my ownership of stereotypical black forms. This conversation was happening as to who has the right to use stereotypical images of blacks. Do they reinforce cultural values that set African Americans back generations, or are they fair-game images that preexist you and me?

MH What about your more mythical cutouts of children with tails or a figure who is half ship, half woman?

KW They are all over the place, aren’t they? They are like little walking fables. I’m externalizing what can’t be expressed verbally. I’m thinking of the little girl holding her tail, but each figure is unreal or hybrid to begin with, so to call this one a shadow or pickaninny or Topsy . . . is she a real character? Is she an externalization of a part of me? There are so many fallacies, so many myths about the absence of humanity in women, in blacks, that I don’t even think it’s abnormal that she has a tail.

MH You work in many different mediums, including paper cutouts, gouache mixed with coffee, brass rubbings, overhead projectors . . . . Lately you have been making films in which you manipulate cutout figures behind a scrim, with shadow and cut-paper sets. These are like narrative animations of your silhouettes. Have you found that each medium leads you in different directions? What are the frustrations and/or delights of each one?

KW I’ve done two films and a video, and the frustrations there are the lack of touch and immediacy. On the other hand, because I’ve made mainly puppet films, there’s a great deal of another sort of touch. We’re making puppets and manipulating them, and they develop personalities. It’s a little goofy, but I’m completely surprised by the performance aspect. I can leave the studio at the end of the day and feel like something happened, something that’s counter to what’s happening out in the world, and it has developed a language and a universe. With the film I made last year, at the end of every day I felt as if I had just made a painting. (laughter) Like, “This is what I want a painting to do!” It’s activated all the way through, not just on the surface. The story happens over time; it unfolds. Very often I picture things in my head all at once. In the film it’s happening on both sides of the canvas.

MH In the film, you emphasize the artificiality of the puppet play. The sticks you use to manipulate the puppets are visible, and you also allow the viewers to see your hands and face, and those of the other puppeteers, semi-visible behind the scrim. What was that decision about?

KW I didn’t want to pretend that it was an illusion. When you’re working with a screen, you’re wearing a mask and putting on a performance. There’s an acknowledgement of the presence of the subject, and then there’s the story, and the subject and the story are always moving back and forth between reality and fiction. I did two live puppet-show performances—something I will never do again—but I discovered that me with a screen or a mask is a whole different personality. I noticed it, I felt it, and I didn’t really like myself afterward. Leading up to getting behind the scrim, I was scared silly, an increasingly erratic nervous wreck. Afterward, I was like Joe Cool. I was in LA, too, which didn’t help. It was a little creepy. I felt that somehow I had to live in the world that the mask created.

MH I know I’ve had moments where I’ve written a poem that horrifies me. I think, “Oh my God, I didn’t mean to have someone having sex with a pig in my poem.” But then I feel like I have to live with it. (laughter)

KW Yeah, narratives are forever.

MH You have talked about the different reactions viewers have when they come to your work. I’ve experienced all sorts of emotions myself looking at it. What emotions do you have when you’re creating the pieces? Do you blush or laugh or cry?

KW Yeah, that’s the hard part: I can’t make this work if I don’t feel something along those lines. I’ve definitely laughed or cackled out of absolute surprise at myself, and I have probably cried enough tears to flood the city. Shame is, I think, the most interesting state because it’s so transgressive, so pervasive. It can occupy all your other, more familiar states: happiness, anger, rage, fear . . . . It’s interesting to put that out on the table, to elicit feelings of shame from others—“Come and join me in my shame!” It is a little peculiar.

I got an email last year from a student at a community college in Arkansas. He told me that in his Art Appreciation class, they watched a video about me and my work, and the reactions from the white students in the class were so violent and cruel. Like, she can only get away with making this kind of work because she’s black! If a white man made this work, he’d be lynched. Language like that. And I’m thinking, “Is this wishful thinking?” The lynching thing frightened me. That was the kind of reaction that I might imagine is out there, but to hear it up close made me a little more afraid about how people respond.

MH You had a show at The Metropolitan Museum of Art last year called “After the Deluge,” which was a response to Hurricane Katrina. What did it feel like to be dealing with such a recent political phenomenon?

KW The problem that I was encountering, like a lot of artists after 9/11, after this disaster in the Gulf, is that it seems impossible to respond adequately through your own work without seeming self-serving or overdetermined or earnest to the point that nobody is going to listen. I was having trouble figuring out how to insinuate myself into the museum in a way that seemed interesting. My feeling was that there was something really vital that I wanted us all—whoever us all is—to hold onto in terms of being confronted with images of disaster over which we may or may not have control. I felt that art could address those underlying currents before they disappeared or were washed away by political positioning or jockeying for the best story.

 

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Still from 8 Possible Beginnings Or: The Creation of African-America, A Moving Picture By Kara E. Walker, 2005, black-and-white film in 16 MM transferred to video, 15 minutes 57 seconds.

MH What are you working on right now? I see some interesting pieces on the wall over there—

KW This is so new that I don’t know if I can name it. There was the Walker Art Center show in Minneapolis, and then the requisite hole of non-production, and I’ve been trying to work my way out of that gradually. The writing on the wall and the images from the Internet are just the beginnings of my convoluted method: writing somewhat spontaneously, and then researching through the depths of what I’m thinking.

Last week I was very annoyed about the state of painting, annoyed with a lot of questions about my uncertainty or my lack of participation in conversations about painting. I’m not really actively painting, so it feels like I’ve missed the boat on what people are talking about in that world. I was looking up contemporary artists who use terms like “image-making strategies.” My sense was that in the sensibility of these artists there’s something corrupt about the picture plane—that any image or mark is just a recitation of other terms. There’s no longer any search for originality. The effort of painting seems to have to do with strategizing: putting the viewer in a position where they’re looking at an intentionally shallow painting—shallow in a way that feels different from, say, Warhol’s shallow. Maybe I’ve over-interpreted it, but I think that Warhol’s sense of shallow is incredibly soulful. It’s open and generous in a dumb kind of way, like, “Here it is!” Yet it’s accepting of its own fallibility and humanity.

MH So you feel that contemporary painting is too veiled, too ironic?

KW Yeah. My feelings grew out of my teaching experiences at Columbia. I was getting the sense that a really good painting only succeeds if it’s abject to the point of suicide. It’s a site of no hope. As if a good painting can no longer stand to see itself alive, thriving. An artist in the program, who is not American, created some work that didn’t have that sensibility. It was very much image- and memory-oriented. The critique veered around to, “You have this very conservative view of painting.” And I thought, “What does that mean?” Was it, “Oh, well, he’s an ethnic artist, so he can tell us a story.” I wondered if that was condescending. It was really complicated.

MH What is teaching like for you?

KW It’s like that. (laughter) I come away with a lot of problems and doubts and insecurities. It’s a little like being in school. It’s a learning process.

MH You’ve mentioned that your work is often taken as a rewriting of history, what was actually happening in the antebellum South. But you’ve asserted that your work is fantasy clothed in historical outfits. I am curious about whether those fantasies are in the historical outfits from the get-go, or whether you transpose them afterward.

KW I think it’s a combination. On my new typewriter last night I wrote a couple of sentences about memory, whether or not there is such a thing as a past and a present, or if the present is just like the past with new clothes on. It was a very frustrating thought, and it started to sound very conservative, which I didn’t want. I wrote something like, “Women always wind up being women.” I read somewhere about how Frederick Douglass’s narrative, or variations on his narrative, have this very American rags-to-riches or boy-to-man construction, whereas—and maybe I just intuited this—women’s narratives are confronted with silences: rape, child death, illegitimate childbirth. Even today, these are the threads that seem to continually bind women together: some determined by the culture, some determined by biology. That’s where women always end up being women: you can do x, y, and z to become a human being, but you’re suddenly confronted with being a woman again in a very limited sense: being a sexual object, and a sexual object who might also become a mother, willingly or unwillingly.

I’m sorry. I just digress. That’s all I do. (laughter)

MH No, it’s great. Digressing is how we get somewhere. Plus this seems to relate to your use or appropriation or revision of offensive language and images. I want to ask you about the resolution that was approved in New York on February 28 to ban the use of the N-word. The person who sponsored it, Councilman Leroy Comrey, argued that the word was derived solely from hate and anger, and that its meaning cannot be changed.

KW I don’t know. I do think that there is a proper use of profanity that is incredibly useful and shouldn’t be washed out or sullied by overuse. Its meaning cannot be changed—but then again, we are constantly changing the meanings of words. It is up to each successive generation. You know, I was sitting in the park yesterday testing out my typewriter, and this little boy looked at this alien object, like, “Cool!” I am typing away, yeah, this is neat, and then his mother took him along. It reminded me of a situation where I was playing a Stevie Wonder song, “Pastime Paradise,” and somebody came in and said, “I don’t know that Puff Daddy song.” I had always assumed that when things are sampled or reused, some of their original content comes with them, but now I don’t think that is the case at all. I have been making my work under this assumption to some extent. I think it comes in waves. A certain moment opens a fissure and all the past comes flooding in.

MH Do you work on the typewriter a lot?

KW I do. Sometimes I write on the computer, but it doesn’t feel the same. I like the clackety-clack of the typewriter. It’s as if it answers. There’s a thought, and you put it down, letter by letter, and it answers back.

MH Does working on a typewriter feel connected to your use of the silhouettes? They are both antiquated mediums.

KW Maybe. Yeah—a little something that’s forgotten and shelved but still incredibly useful, or vital, that leads you to all sorts of other innovations. The typewriter leaves every flaw intact. When I write longhand, if all else fails, I can draw a picture. I can cover up the errors, the mistakes of switches in tense or grammar. With the typewriter, it’s, “I am flawed, but I’m going to keep trying!”

MH I’m glad you’re talking about the text in your work. I’m interested in the constant interplay between text and image in your pieces. Text makes its way onto the surface of your drawings, and your titles have subtitles. How do you think of their relation?

KW Well, sometimes I get mad at myself when I write on top of the drawing, because it seems like a giveaway. They might come off as too instructive, even if it’s written in the same spirit as a typed piece or a title. In my thinking, the word is a completely separate thing. It really sits off to the side, unless I write it underneath. The exceptions are the watercolors that were a response to accusations of irresponsibility to the black community. A suite of about eighty watercolors called Do You Like Crème in Your Coffee and Chocolate in Your Milk? which I worked on, diary-like, to deal with the letter-writing campaign started by Betye Saar and Howardena Pindell. I put a fair amount of trust in my visual “speaking” voice. I allowed myself to write and draw pretty freely over the pages of a notebook so that page by page I could ask and answer the question, “What is a ‘positive black image’?” Is a positive image one that is honest? And if so, to whom or what? I think that images, these hand-drawn characters I make, have the ambiguous duty of being both part of the real world (which is cruel and nasty) and the world of other images (which sometimes pretend to be noble, but are often concealing disgusting intentions).

 

Walker01.jpg
Kara Walker, Negress Notes, 1995, collage, ink, gouache, pencil, and watercolor on paper, 9×6”.

MH I love your variety of titling strategies: You play with puns, as in African’tDawn of Ann,The Emancipation Approximation; you appropriate antebellum language, as in Missus K. Walker returns her thanks to the Ladies and Gentlemen of New York for the great Encouragement she has received from them, in the profession in which she has practiced in New England; and sometimes you give a series of pieces the same title, as in Negress Notes (Brown Follies). At what point do the titles arrive for you, and what function do they perform?

KW They’re the sideshow act. Just thought of that. (laughter) The image is that of a three-ring circus. I’ve never known how to concentrate on a three-ring circus. The title has its own agenda, which sometime runs counter to the rage in the piece. It can be a queasy invitation to this uncomfortable space. One of the pieces or situations that I was happiest with was when, over a couple of months, I sat and typed on note cards in the hopes of something arriving or making sense. Another month went by and I realized that I really needed some images. I thought I would try to use the note cards as a springboard for the images, although there was no one-to-one relation. The pictures I made are called American Primitives. Varying in size from six inches square to about nine by 12, they are pretty small, intimate ruminations on black figures plopped into a scene, like actors on a stage.

I feel like I’m constantly at step one of learning how to be an artist, or how to make art. I have an idealized folk artist in my mind. . . . I don’t know if it’s my calling, I don’t know if there’s a divine voice behind this, but I know that I have to do it. That was where the writing came from, and I kept the same method alive for making the images. The images were all gouache landscapes on gessoed panels with tissue-paper cutouts on top. I sat at my kitchen table and just cranked out one painting after another. It was very energetic and satisfying. And then there was this third moment when text came back in. Each one of the pieces had a title that had nothing to do with the initial writings, but I felt that I held a strange thread that connected them, from writing to image to writing again.

MH Could you give an example of one card, one image, and one title that came afterward?

KW The cards are dense. Lots of trying to figure out what the voice is, a voice that seems to shift character midsentence, from master to . . . There was one group of cards where I was thinking of myself as a New World black, like I have my own land that I can do anything with, but I have no tools and no skills. How do I create this project of a new society, given the scarcity of resources? I was trying to write from this debauched kind of leader position, which is what I was feeling like a little bit at home. (laughter) One of the images I painted was a tangle of branches, and two little faces in circles that became two suns. One has a whitish face, and the other has sort of black Negro features. They’re scowling at each other. I was doing these things like an assembly line. I had these two faces and the tangle of branches, and then I said, “What kind of cutout am I going to make?” I made another circle, and by accident there was a little cut in the paper already, so it looked like it was a smile, in profile. It just made me laugh. It went from this landscape that was not ever going to be completely developed properly, to Two Competing Suns and The Impostor, which became the title. I loved the title so much.

MH That’s one of my favorite pieces, and I love that title in particular. Wallace Stevens is a ridiculously good titler— Le Monocle de Mon Oncle or The Revolutionists Stop for Orangeade. Last weekend I was in Baltimore, at the American Visionary Art Museum and saw a painting by William Tyler, an outsider artist, with a great title: The Imposter Chicken Went Swimming in the Birdbath.

KW Wow. You didn’t get to the National Great Blacks in Wax Museum, speaking of great titles?

MH I did, and that’s a title I don’t know what to do with.

KW It’s a weird one. Blacks in Wax? It’s sort of jaunty and rolls off the tongue. I think it makes me smile too much. It runs counter to the missionary—I was going to say missionary position. (laughter) Missionary quality of the institution. The whole place runs counter to itself. It’s interestingly charged and problematic.

MH I noticed while I was there that they had one of the images you use in your visual essay in the catalogue for the Walker Art Center show—an image of little black children sitting in a tree, titled Blackbirds. Is that where you found that image?

KW No, it was a gift. Coco Fusco sent it to me. An eBay purchase. I need to thank her for that. Thank you, Coco.

MH What do you think its purpose is?

KW I’m not sure if it has a purpose. That’s what’s so peculiar about the whole black collectible phenomenon. So many objects and images serve absolutely no purpose. What’s the need to continually look at bodies in a particular way? It seems perverse.

MH You’ve said before that some of your favorite artists are anonymous. Do you have favorite pieces that you can describe?

KW Well, there’s one anonymous piece that I did a riff on a couple of years ago in this book called American Primitives—a very queer little painting called Darkytown. No knowledge of who could have made it, why it’s titled that, what the characters could have meant, but it epitomized something . . . . It was ludicrous in its formal construction, because there’s an attempt at single-point perspective that goes off in one direction, and there are black caricatures way too big in the foreground, and there’s a dog and some other little people, and a telephone or a telegraph wire. It looks like one of those Komar and Melamid Most Wantedpaintings. It’s got everything: landscape, portrait, animal, perspective, illusion—

MH You liked that you didn’t know who had drawn it?

KW Well, I like that it’s shrouded in mystery.

MH At the Visionary Art Museum in Baltimore they have this amazing dress made in the ’30s by an anonymous woman who was institutionalized for schizophrenia. The hospital had a dress code and she crocheted this “horse dress” in response to the hospital’s policies. It’s the most incredibly beautiful, eerie, and defiant dress I’ve ever seen—the horse’s eyes are where the breasts would be, and there are abstracted hooves on the side.

KW It’s so interesting to have the need to externalize what can’t be processed internally.

MH Do you regret, resent, or relate to how much of your own biography is used in interpretations of your work?

KW It’s one of those things that makes me smile because it’s just a story. It has no relation to the truth of who I am or how I came to be. A few years ago a young historian, Gina Dent, gave a lecture about how often African American women, creative women, artists or writers, find that it’s not so much that their work is received critically as their body is received critically. Their whole body and biography become the source of query. The other part of her argument had to do with how often these same women have to resort to writing their own biographies or constructing their own critiques in order to counteract that.

MH In her book Seeing the Unspeakable, Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw talks about how often writers scrutinize your appearance—

KW It just happened recently in an article about my willowy limbs. (laughter) It’s worthy of some commentary.

Walker20.jpg
Kara Walker, Br’er, 1996, watercolor and gouache on paper, 62×42”.

MH You’ve invented a persona in your work, “Kara Elizabeth Walker, an emancipated Negress and leader in her cause.” Could you talk about that?

KW Kara Walker the invented construct—I’ve never been asked about it. I don’t have an answer for it ready at hand. My graduate-school show was the first time there was an external narrative to what I was proposing to do, the work that I could have created if I had lived 150 or 200 years ago. If I had access to any tools at all, it might have been something to cut with or some paper—so the silhouettes seemed very accessible. Over the years, the persona has shifted here and there to reflect and hold onto this imaginary self of the past and reflect changes in my present circumstances. Like, at one point I added a “B” for my married, hyphenated last name. Then I got rid of the “B.” I am less interested in reinventing that character, because she has to position herself against or sidle up next to white or institutional power in this seductive and cagey way, and I can only do that so often without feeling a little queasy.

MH Can you tell me more about the idealized folk artist you mentioned having in your head?

KW Well, I didn’t have a certain kind of artist in mind. I’ve often responded to early American art that has the quality of “We’re not trained in Europe, we’re not going on the Grand Tour, we’re just trying to make pictures of what we see,” because it runs counter to my experience. I grew up around artists and art institutions, galleries, and students who were studying art. There’s nothing about me that doesn’t know how to paint, but I don’t trust my ability to paint, so I feel like I have to continually relearn it. My first real encounter with early American art and folk art was in college. I felt that I recognized a real humanity that I had been missing in modern painting. I don’t have any kind of animosity toward the modernists; it just felt incredibly subversive to me to like genre painting and pictures of things that are rendered with very little professional skill. It’s a little like the writing I like to do. It comes out with a kind of force, and it’s the force or the intent that legitimizes it, makes it human and real. My proverbial folk-art self might also be similar to the one that started cutting out paper, although I had a lot of rules and ideas in place for why I wasn’t going to paint. I didn’t have rules in place for why I was going to cut paper.

MH Your work has been compared to satirical work by people like Hogarth and Goya along with Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Robert Colescott, and Adrian Piper. Are there people in other genres that you feel a certain kinship with?

KW Mark Twain is high on the list. I sometimes conjure up imaginary conversations with him about his characters, their frankness. I query him about Huck and Jim and their urgency to survive. I ask if he ever felt disappointed that his political stories were misunderstood as children’s tales, or if he was perfectly jaded by human foibles and certain that “children’s tales” are all we produce anyway.

MH How would you describe your relationship to narrative?

KW Laylah Ali and I were talking not too long ago about how sometimes the word narrative is used in a way that feels very distant. Storytelling has this quality of being folksy and homey and not critically viable. I like storytelling. I like the way people invent things and lie, and construct identities for themselves as a form of storytelling.

MH How did you start using Br’er Rabbit in your work?

KW I worked backwards. The rabbit popped up before I had really sat down and read Joel Chandler Harris’s Uncle Remus stories, and then I got very interested. It wasn’t too long after I had drawn the rabbit that I said, “Hey, that must be Br’er Rabbit.” It’s a rabbit with clothes on, you know.

MH Which is not so common. I didn’t know the whole background of Br’er Rabbit and Br’er Fox before I looked it up—that the two are based on African trickster figures; that “Br’er” was an abbreviation of “Brother,” which is how the slaves addressed one another; and that the stories were collected from slaves at the Laura Plantation in Vacherie, Louisiana.

KW I have a collection of the stories, and some of the drawings and engravings I prefer over others. I like the crispness of A. B. Frost’s drawings of wrinkled pants and the expressiveness of these animals running around acting like black men. That’s the strangest part about the stories. That and the idea of ventriloquism. Here is Joel Chandler Harris effectively playing the part of anthropologist: he’s transcribing, but also calling things from his memory. There is something that feels direct, but it is completely indirect in that he creates this cobbled-together mythological creature called Uncle Remus who was a construction of the many servants and slaves that Harris had known in his childhood. Then there is the little boy, who is Harris himself, or maybe he is the entryway for a certain type of reader to inhabit this world. In one of the stories, there are a number of voices: Uncle Remus starts the story, but a mysterious man, maybe West Indian—the accent changes—starts some verbal sparring with Uncle Remus. He corrects Uncle Remus about how the story should go, and it is almost illegible because of how the dialect is transcribed. Then Aunt Somebody Else is off to the side making commentary. You can almost hear it happening, but just when you think you are getting closer to a very familiar, familial scenario, you are pulled back into this white male point of view—a reminder that you are not part of this. It’s an interesting process to move through all of these levels of story to get back to a trickster character. It feels very African. These are not like Aesop’s fables, with a moral at the end.

MH Speaking of fables, you made a limited-edition pop-up book called Freedom: A Fable? A Curious Interpretation of the Wit of a Negress in Troubled Times. I know that you designed it for Peter and Ilene Norton and that it was not intended for children, but the form itself does suggest children as a possible audience. I am wondering if you have had any experience with children seeing your work.

KW Just my daughter, who is my biggest critic.

MH How old is she?

KW She’s nine now, and at the risk of repeating myself formulaically, she did at age four say something along the lines of “Mommy makes mean art.” She still remembers saying that. She comes to my shows. At the Walker, for the first time I felt like censoring my work from her. I didn’t, but it did creep into my consciousness.

MH There are a lot of attempts to mediate people’s reactions to your work: wall text and warning signs. I am curious what an unmediated experience with your work might be like.

KW I don’t know. Children are drawn to the overall clarity of the black figures on white. Then things get pretty murky, because parents come in and explain things and it becomes too much. Too much for the parent, like where do you begin, or do you just let things flow? That’s what I chose to do with my daughter. I had all kinds of anxieties. What negative impact will this have? I just thought, I can’t predict anything, so she will just have to guide me through my work.

MH You create these worlds that are so full of brutality and desire and rape and maiming—umbilical cords and piles of shit and power struggles everywhere. Is there any love in that world?

KW There is all this giving over of self and stealing and taking of others. I think it is born of a kind of passion, but you know how passion can be confused with love and can inspire all kinds of criminal acts. Where is the love? I’m still learning. (laughter) The writing pieces are about that. There is still a part of the activity that is private, and the voice within the writing is still complicated.

MH T. S. Eliot wrote a poem called “The Hollow Men” that reminds me of your work: “Between the idea / And the reality / Between the motion / And the act / Falls the Shadow” and “Between the conception / And the creation / Between the emotion / And the response / Falls the Shadow” and “Between the desire / And the spasm / Between the potency / And the existence / Between the essence / And the descent / Falls the Shadow.” Do any of those “betweens” feel like places that your work resides?

KW All of them. Where the shadows that I’ve been making fall short is that they become solid and I feel like I am still—with the film or projections—trying to find a way to make the between-ness more transparent without being absent.

MH That between place is a state that I am always thinking about. Like F. Scott Fitzgerald saying, “The true test of a first-rate mind is the ability to hold two contradictory opinions at the same time,” or Rilke, “Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves.”

KW That sounds like love right there to me.

 

>via: http://bombsite.com/issues/100/articles/2904

 

 

ECONOMICS: The Economic Myths That Keep Us Chained: Romney’s 47% vs. Reality

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

The Economic Myths

That Keep Us Chained:

Romney’s 47% vs. Reality

 

 
On September 17, the one-year anniversary of Occupy Wall Street instead of hearing about the 99% we heard about the 47% who according to Mitt Romney: 

“will vote for the president no matter what… are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it. That’s an entitlement. And the government should give it to them. And they will vote for this president no matter what…These are people who pay no income tax.”(Ezra Klein; Washington Post Wonkbook ) 


As a social worker and  community organizer I have to say that this 47 percent is a myth. Due to arbitrary sanctions, agency errors, onerous application requirements, long waits to apply for services, failed communication systems, arduous work requirements and punishment within the welfare system low-income people are not receiving much needed services (Guilty Until Proven Innocent Report 2012 FPWA). 

The myth that welfare and government assistance are easy to obtain and maintain has been pervasive since the 1980’s “welfare queen” character was perpetuated by President Ronald Reagan.  The welfare queen, much like the lochness monster, is seen by a privileged few but no one can actually prove her existence. 

Now we have a new mythical monster the 47 percent who are an entitled class. The reality is that our entitlement system underserves many needy individuals and families. According to the Federation of Protestant Welfare Agencies(FPWA) Report Guilty Until Proven Innocent:

 

“One of the primary functions of the welfare program is to alleviate poverty by providing essential income support to families who qualify  but in 2010 the program only served 27% of families living in poverty, a 41% decrease from 1996 when the program served 68% of families living in need.”

The harsh reality is that many people who are qualified to receive government assistance such as SNAP (Food Stamps) are the working poor who do not apply because they cannot take time off of their low-wage jobs to undergo the long and confusing application process. If someone is able to find out about assistance, endure the confusing and long process of applying and is actually approved then they can look forward to the possibility of receiving a sanction which is a process in which your benefits are called into question for some transgression as petty as missing an appointment because you had to work. 

 

“According to the New York State Office of Temporary and Disability Assistance (OTDA) from April 2006 to through April 2009, 25% of New York City family cases with at least one adult or minor teen head of household were sanctioned or in the sanction process.” (Guilty Until Proven Innocent).  

Sanctions usually punish the poorest who most need social services. Though I use New York as an example, these issues are prominent across the country, especially in rural areas were application centers are further away and lines to apply can stretch around the block. This reality is unknown to many who assume that it is easy to apply for assistance programs because unless you are in need of a social service provider, you will not see the maze that is the American social service system. 

Furthermore, there is such shame around needing assistance that many keep silent about the dehumanizing process.  I know firsthand of this dehumanization not only as a social worker but as a person who grew-up poor. I can remember accompanying my mother to appointments for assistance and waiting for hours; the assumption being that poor people’s time is not important.  This approach keeps the poor person in a Catch- 22 because if you want to attend school or work to better yourself you do not have the time to do so because of the countless hours spent waiting for services you desperately need. 

During the application process you are shuffled with disdain from appointment to appointment by low-paid caseworkers who are usually one paycheck away from being in your position. I remember feeling ashamed and dehumanized by this process, but through the assistance of many people and programs such as grants for college I am now able to stand alongside other poor people to organize for justice. Unless you have experienced the social services system you may believe the myth that low-income people are entitled, but as the ranks of the poor grow to include the formerly middle-class we have to let go of this myth just as a child has to let go of Santa Claus. 

Though myths may be comforting to our egos, ultimately they stunt our development. If we are going to survive as a country in the face of growing economic uncertainty, we have to put away these childish notions of the welfare queen, the 47 percent, pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps and rugged individualism. 

From the Homestead Act, to the GI Bill and legacy admissions at top colleges many Americans receive entitlements based on wealth and race privilege. We are all standing on the shoulders of someone who helped us along the way; no one is successful through their hard work alone.

So what does this mean for Black Women? I think that as Black women we need to prioritize and not demonize the poor with the knowledge that systematic racism creates poverty. As Black unemployment grows we cannot afford to believe in myths that will distract us from the work of economic empowerment.

For more information or to obtain a copy of the FPWA Report Guilty Until Proven Innocent: Sanctions, Agency Error and Financial Punishment within New York State’s Welfare System visit FPWA Policy, Advocacy & Research.

-Onleilove Alston