VIOLENCE: Marissa Alexander gets 20-year sentence > Melissa Harris-Perry - msnbc

<p style="font-size:11px; font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; color: #999; margin-top: 5px; background: transparent; text-align: center; width: 420px;">Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy</p>

Marissa Alexander gets

20-year sentence

 - 

Last weekend, Melissa examined the case against Marissa Alexander, the Jacksonville mother of three who fired a single bullet into her kitchen ceiling two years ago to warn her husband, Rico Gray, against continuing his physical attack on her. Gray, who reacted in violent anger after discovering that Alexander texted pictures of their newborn child to her ex-husband, spoke out earlier this week in an interview with TheLoop21:

“Personally, I wish she would have taken the three years,” Gray said. “I don’t wish 20 years on no one.”

He's referring to the plea deal that Alexander reportedly turned down, a deal that took into account Gray's history of violence. Alexander presumably cast that deal aside because she genuinely believed that she was standing her ground -- both figuratively, and legally. But Florida's "Stand Your Ground" castle-doctrine law somehow didn't apply to her, despite the fact that her case appears to fit the statute to a T.

She was convicted of three counts of aggravated assault in a matter of minutes -- and today, she was sentenced to 20 years in prison, a sentence she will appeal:

The jury found that she had indeed discharged the firearm in the incident, resulting in her mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years due to Florida's “10-20-Life” statutes...

Afterward U.S. Rep. Corrine Brown also challenged State Attorney [Angela] Corey at the courthouse saying the charges were overboard and labeled the case "institutional racism." She said she has the best domestic violence attorney looking into and as well as other prejudicial outcomes against blacks. This is the beginning, not the end, she said.

Corey was firm in the punishment, noting Alexander's gunshot easily could have ricocheted and hit the children or husband.

Corey, as you may recall, is the same Florida prosecutor who filed charges against George Zimmerman, who shot 17-year-old Trayvon Martin to death in February. (Interesting that "Stand Your Ground" may very well be the defense she and her colleagues face from Zimmerman's attorneys.) Sunday being Mother's Day, Trayvon's mother, Sybrina Fulton, has released a stirring video urging Americans to join the Second Chance on Shoot First campaign, which folks like New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg have joined hoping to drive lawmakers to re-examine laws like "Stand Your Ground."

For those who are unable to watch the video, her message begins, “This will be my first Mother’s Day without my son, Trayvon. I know it will be hard, but with my faith, family, and the outpouring of national support, I will get through." We'll have much more on this on Sunday's show.

 

VIDEO: Acoustic Guitar Break > Africa is a Country

Asa

Acoustic Guitar Break

We thought it would be nice to compile a Bonus Music Break centered on acoustic guitar music. First up is Toronto-based Ghanaian Kae Sun with “Lion on a Leash”:

Another Ghanaian: Kesse (made his breakthrough on Ghana’s version of American Idol) was profiled by The Fader last year:

Then there’s German-Nigerian Ayo:

And video of a 23 minute live set by Asa, France-based Nigerian (credits: “Fire on the Mountain,” “Mr Jailer,”), recorded in San Francisco:

Bez, the young Nigerian (remember him?) will be in New York City next week (Society HAE has the details)

You can’t say acoustic guitar music and not include Michael Kiwanuka, Ugandan-born British crooner. He is a big part of our regular Twitter #musicbreaks.

Stateside, there’s Cody ChesnuT. (BTW, while below he slows things down, I’ve seen him crank it up with The Legendary Roots Crew):

And Gary Clarke Jnr with a stripped down version of my favorite tunes (remember him?)

 

PUB: Call for Proposals/ Papers: 4th Protest Arts International Festival (Zimbabwe/ worldwide) > Writers Afrika

Call for Proposals/ Papers:

4th Protest Arts

International Festival

(Zimbabwe/ worldwide)


Deadline: 30 May 2012

Savanna Trust in collaboration with the University of Zimbabwe Theatre Arts Department invites artists, media experts, civic society leaders, academics and human rights activist to submit abstracts and performance/exhibition/film/workshop proposals for the 4th protest Arts International Festival. The theme for this year is “Protest Arts, Culture and Democracy: Imagining and inventing the future.”

Festival symposium sub-theme:

· Crisis protest arts and democratic engagement

· Imagining alternative spaces, venues and audiences for protest arts

· Protest arts, innovation and aesthetic excellence for the 21st Century

· The media and protest arts: prospects and challenges for the future

· Aesthetics of protest and the politics of transition and constitution-making process

· Protest arts and the struggle of the everyday: gender, race, ethnicity and classism.

· Artistic/aesthetic dimensions of protest marches and demonstrations: Prospects and challenges

· Globalisation and Protest Arts: The present and the future

· Arts, culture, religion and the prophetic voice for democracy

Submission of abstracts of performance/workshop/exhibition proposals

Abstracts and proposals of between 200 and 350 words should be e-mailed, not later than 30 May 2012 to paifst@gmail.com

Note: Due to overwhelming interest in the festival the organisers are unable to fund travel and accommodation for all successful regional and international participants. However, the festival will assist prospective participants who want support letters etc. to secure own funding.

CONTACT INFORMATION:

For inquiries/ submissions: paifst@gmail.com

Website: http://www.savannatrust.org/

 

 

PUB: Applications open for 2012 International Young Person’s Short Story Award > Litro

Applications open for 2012 International Young Person’s Short Story Award

Inspiring, encouraging and acknowledging the creativity of young people is a common goal for London-based Litro magazine and the International Gateway for Gifted Youth (IGGY) at the University of Warwick. Litro & IGGY are pleased to announce that the International Short Story Award for Young People will be held again in 2012.

The Award is funded by alumni from the University of Warwick, and is open to young people from around the world aged 11-19. In addition to a cash prize of £2,500 the winner will also be published in Litro magazine and see excerpts of their work displayed on a poster in a London Underground station.

The illustrious panel of judges for the 2012 award include internationally acclaimed authors Chika Unigwe, Gemma Weekes, Will Eaves and Damian Barr.

 

  
 Rules:

 

  • The deadline for entries is 24th July 2012.
  • You must be 11-19 years of age.
  • Your entry must be no more than 3,000 words in length.
  • The theme is very broad to allow writers to be creative. And when we said it can be “international”, we meant that you can include aspects of your own culture or write about a character’s cross-cultural experience.
  • Submit your entry here.

Timeline:

  • The long list of nominated writers will be announced on 5th September 2012
  • The shortlist of six writers will be announced on 14th September 2012
  • The winner will be announced at the Award Ceremony in London at the end of October 2012

Commenting on the announcement of the award, Litro founder Eric Akoto said:

“It is great news that the Award will be going ahead again in 2012 and is a mark of the success of the entrants from last year’s event. The Award is a fantastic opportunity for aspiring young writers to showcase their talent and to be recognised for their literary creativity. We are delighted to be partnering again with IGGY on this. The magazine has thrived because of the talent of its writers and it’s exciting to think of who and what we might discover through this Award.”

 

PUB:: The $10,000 Drue Heinz Literature Prize (for unpublished collection of short stories/ novella) - worldwide > Writers Afrika

The $10,000 Drue Heinz

Literature Prize

(for unpublished collection

of short stories/ novella)

- worldwide


Deadline: 30 June 2012

(Note: the award is open to writers in English, whether or not they are citizens of the United States.)

The Drue Heinz Literature Prize recognizes and supports writers of short fiction and makes their work available to readers around the world. The award is open to writers who have published a book-length collection of fiction or at least three short stories or novellas in commercial magazines or literary journals.

Manuscripts are judged anonymously by nationally known writers; past judges have included Robert Penn Warren, Joyce Carol Oates, Raymond Carver, Margaret Atwood, Russell Banks, Rick Moody and Joan Didion. The prize carries a cash award of $15,000 and publication by the University of Pittsburgh Press under its standard contract.

The winner will be announced by the University Press in January. No information about the winner will be released before the official announcement. The volume of manuscripts prevents the Press from offering critiques or entering into communication or correspondence about manuscripts. Please do not call or e-mail the Press.

ELIGIBILITY

1. The award is open to writers who have published a novel, a book-length collection of fiction or a minimum of three short stories or novellas in commercial magazines or literary journals of national distribution. On-line publication does not count toward this requirement.

2. The award is open to writers in English, whether or not they are citizens of the United States.

3. University of Pittsburgh employees, former employees, current students, and those who have been students within the last three years are not eligible for the award.

4. Translations are not eligible if the translation was not done by the author.

5. Eligible submissions include a manuscript of short stories; one or more novellas (a novella may comprise a maximum of 130 double-spaced typed pages); or a combination of one or more novellas and short stories. Novellas are only accepted as part of a larger collection. Manuscripts may be no fewer than 150 and no more than 300 typed pages.

6. Stories or novellas previously published in book form as part of an anthology are eligible.

FORMAT FOR SUBMISSIONS

1. Manuscripts must be typed double-spaced on quality white paper, unbound, and pages must be numbered consecutively. Clean, legible photocopies on high quality white paper are acceptable.

2. Each submission must include a list of the writer's published short fiction work, with full citations.

3. Manuscripts will be judged anonymously. Each manuscript should have two cover pages: one listing the title of the manuscript and the author's name, address, e-mail address (if available), and telephone number; and a second listing only the manuscript title. The author's name, other identifying information, and publication information must not appear after the first cover page.

4. Manuscripts will not be returned.

MULTIPLE SUBMISSIONS

1. Manuscripts may also be under consideration by other publishers, but if a manuscript is accepted for publication elsewhere, please notify the Press.

2. Authors may submit more than one manuscript to the competition as long as one manuscript or a portion thereof does not duplicate material submitted in another manuscript.

DATES FOR SUBMISSION

Manuscripts must be received during May and June 2012. That is, they must be postmarked on or after May 1 and on or before June 30.

CONTACT INFORMATION:

For inquiries: press@pitt.edu

For submissions: send submissions to Drue Heinz Literature Prize, University of Pittsburgh Press, 3400 Forbes Avenue, Eureka Building, Fifth Floor, Pittsburgh, PA 15260

Website: http://www.upress.pitt.edu/

 

 

VIDEO + COMMENTARY: "Scandal" - Episode 6

GO HERE TO VIEW IN LARGE FORMAT


S&A "Scandal"

Talk-Back Session #3

(Some Answers +

Shonda Rhimes Seems Certain

About A Season 2)


Television by Tambay | May 11, 2012

Session 3 of the weekly S&A Scandal Talkback, now that the penultimate episode has aired (last night), and I'm sure most of you have seen it.

I watched it this morning.

If you haven't seen that episode yet, then you may NOT want to read any of this.

So, as expected, we learned about how Olivia Pope's relationship with the Prez got started on the campaign trail, when she was brought onboard to do what she does best - fix his campaign; we also see how she begun to assemble her team, and the contentious primary race between Fitz and Sally Langston, who's now vice president, in an episode that contained mostly flashbacks.

Some questions were answered, maybe most importantly, we learned who the mastermind has been behind the entire Amanda Tanner fiasco; AND even more significant, who the woman is with Fitz on that audio sex tape - a mystery to everyone aware of the tape except Fitz and the woman - Olivia Pope.

I initially suspected Prez Fitz's wife was somehow involved, but even though she's certainly proven to be capable - given the really sly and even unconscionable thing she did to help keep Fitz in the presidential race (recall the scene in last week's episode in which she told Fitz "there's no one in this building [the White House] who won't go to extremes for you"), and the fact that she had an extramarital affair before Fritz and Olivia hooked up - she's innocent here... at least, thus far. Who knows what Shonda Rhimes has in store for her in upcoming episodes.

Their marriage is reminiscent of what people said about Bill And Hillary Clinton's marriage - that it's essentially like a business partnership. Both have/had their political ambitions, and are/were simply working together like business partners to see those objectives through - even in light of Bill's 3 or 4 affairs, including the Monica Lewinsky scandal, which likely inspired the Amanda Tanner fiasco in Scandal.

But it turns out that Billy Chambers has been our man all along. I actually never suspected him at all. Did you?

And with the way this episode ended (Chambers stabbing Gideon in the neck with a pair of scissors) and next week's season finale's synopsis (when Quinn finds herself in a fix that's both tragic and compromising, Olivia and the team rush to help. Meanwhile, Cyrus turns reluctantly to Olivia when Billy Chambers makes an announcement that shakes Fitz's presidency to its core), episode 7 should be an explosive one, likely ending the season with a major cliffhanger.

What could this tragic and compromising fix be that Quinn finds herself in? In her last scene in episode 6, she's in Gideon's bed, post-coital. And now Gideon's been stabbed in the neck. I'm guessing the predicament she finds herself in will involve her relationship with Gideon. 

 

And what could this core-shattering announcement from Billy Chambers be? Maybe he breaks his silence and reveals all he suspects of the Prez's affair with Olivia? 

Gideon is left bleeding profusely - will he die?

What will Olivia and Fitz do to prevent the audio sex tape from being made public, assuming that's a turn the show takes? 

Of course, my Twitter feed was all abuzz about the *steamy* scene between Olivia and Fitz in one of the flashbacks. If you thought that was steamy, you should know that it could have been even steamier, because, as Shonda told THR yesterday, she had to "fight" for those scenes.

The sex scene, I wrote it really, really specifically. The actors really went for it and tried to make it real. I had to take it by Broadcast Standards and Practices more times than I can count. There were shots that I had to pull out; they sent it to lawyers. It was crazy what went on with this scene. It's not a scene in which you watch two characters have sex; they never have sex, the scene ends when any sex could possibly begin. Yet there was something about it that was really steamy for broadcast standards and practices. They were so worried about it that we had to fight those battles.

And in response to the question of what she had to cut out, she replied:

Frames and shots; there were just little, tiny images that had to come out to make it not "too hot" for network television. In the end, I was still really pleased with it because I wasn't willing to compromise.

Interesting. I didn't think it was particularly risque; I feel like we've seen even riskier love scenes on network TV - especially in primetime, during its timeslot. Maybe we'll get a "Showrunner's cut" for the DVD/Blu-ray release with all the frames and shots she had to remove, included :)

And let's not forget David's investigation into Amanda Tanner's death. How will that affect the other plot-lines? I can see both he and Olivia pairing up (not romantically) to eventually get the story behind Tanner's baby, kidnapping and murder.

I like how the show keeps the audience a bit off-balance; just when you think you've maybe snuffed something out, it takes you off in a direction you didn't quite expect, which helps keep it interesting. Although I'm hoping it's not all just to keep the viewer off-balance, and that there IS a method to the madness: Amanda Tanner's kidnapping, the president showing up at Olivia's door, and now Gideon being stabbed - all happening successively in each of the endings of the last 3 episodes.

So what can we expect for the season finale?

Acording to Rhimes:

I think a lot of it ties in, a lot of questions get answered. I liked the idea that whether we were doing seven episodes or 17 episodes that when we got to the end of this run there was going to be some definitive questions answered. The Amanda Tanner aspect of the story would be put to bed in some way for the audience. I didn't like the idea that we would leave that hanging. That said, there are other pieces of the puzzle that leap off into a new direction for the audience.

And finally, as we wait to find out whether ABC will renew it for a second season (and quite frankly, at this point, I don't see how they couldn't), allow me to highlight a sentence from Shonda's chat with THR in which I'd say she all but outright states that there will indeed be a season 2. 

THR asks Rhimes about backstory for the other members of Olivia's team, and she replied with this:

One of the things that we're excited about doing for Season 2 is to really delve into who these characters were. We will see what happens with Stephen. You've heard all this time that Quinn didn't exist before 2008. Who is Quinn? That's going to really start to resonate as we move on.

So, there ya have it. Sounds like Shonda MIGHT already know something we don't know, when she starts off with, "one of the things that we're excited about doing for season 2;" or am I just reading too much into that?

Anyway, as I already said, ABC will renew it. There's no reason not to. I expect an announcement today, or soon thereafter.

 

__________________________

 

As Expected, ABC Renews "Scandal" For A Second Season!

TELEVISIONBY TAMBAY | MAY 11, 2012 6:44 PM
1 COMMENT

Am super proud to say that @ScandalABC has been picked for a 2nd season!!! Am doing a little dance of joy. Still waiting to hear on PP...

Words tweeted by showrunner, creator, producer of the series Shonda Rhimes, just moments ago.

So it's done, as I think most of us expected. Are ya happy now? :)

When all the details are revealed, we'll have everything for you so stay tuned!

In the meantime, don't forget to chime in with your thoughts on last night's episode in the latest edition of the S&AScandal Talkback Session HERE.

 __________________________

 

Is Olivia Pope the New

Sally Hemings?

 

 

My president is black. Finally. We’ve had to wait a long time for that, and I’m willing to wager that, when he leaves office, we’ll be waiting a long time again. So it’s interesting to note that, though Hollywood was the first to publicly present depictions of black U.S. presidents, the only current network show featuring our commander-in-chief has cast him as white. We know that Scandal’sOlivia Pope is based on a “fixer” from the Bush administration, but the show itself is set in 2012. And here we are back to a white republican holding the highest office in the land.

This would be a little unsettling on its own. (If Hollywood’s hypothetical black presidents were presented as a bit of revisionist history or a concessionary nod to a hope for where the country was headed, is Scandal’s white president indicative of a similar hope?) But it’s all the more distracting, given the show’s focus on Olivia’s ongoing love affair with said president.

As soapy and sensationalistic as this show is, it’s hard for me to entirely lose myself in it. I’m too distracted by this idea that, for all her gutsy unflappable-ness, and for all her intimidating, unflinching command in the face of an employee or opponent, the married president happens to be her weakness. Even if it weren’t too convenient a plot point, revealed far too early on, it’d still stick in my craw. One of the reasons why is that I can’t seem to view this show through an un-racialized lens.

This show is giving me too many shades of Sally Hemings. I can’t.

It was especially difficult for me to turn off my Mammy-Jezebel-Sapphire-detector during last night’s episode, as Olivia’s and Fitz’s back story developed. This intense need the story-line has to convince us that these two are star-crossed and that their coupling is Something Real reminds me of master-slave-relationship apologists who either believe that the slave is in a position to“seduce” the master or that their relationship can be rooted in healthy love.

Of course times have changed, and Olivia’s no slave. But in choosing to pursue a dominant-submissive relationship with someone who is, as the script keeps forcing him to remind us, the Leader of the Free World, it’s hard not to connect her to the earliest, collective history U.S. black women share.

If I’m arguing that these complex and uncomfortable connections are being made simply because the show chose to cast a white man as president, I have to ask if Olivia and Fitz’s relationship would still be as uncomfortable if he were, like our actual sitting leader, black. It would still read as immoral, to be sure; no matter how doggedly this show wants us to believe the First Lady is gross and unconscionable, she’s still the president’s wife and Olivia’s still his side chick. And the idea of a cheating black president would come with its own discomfort, given how much we’d associate him with Obama and how much our community seems to revere the Barack-Michelle love story.

Maybe the show chose the lesser of two color-casting evils, so to speak.

What do you think?

 


 

 

 

 

VIDEO: Xenobia Bailey—Feminism and funk mix in artist's crocheted pieces

Arts Preview:
Feminism and funk mix
in artist's crocheted pieces

 

Thursday, August 08, 2002

By Mary Thomas, Post-Gazette Art Critic

'TO BE AN ARTIST and to be able to create things -- it's like fireworks every time you think about something!" exclaims Harlem-based Xenobia Bailey, whose large-scale, explosively vibrant crocheted artworks form a "Paradise Under Reconstruction in the Aesthetic of Funk" at the Society for Contemporary Craft in the Strip District.

Xenobia Bailey not only designed the clothing and accessories -- such as a "herb gathering apron" -- for her "Sister Paradise," but also created the story of the goddess's passage to the Americas to help her enslaved people. (Robin Rombach, Post-Gazette)

 

Concentric rings of color and pattern -- Op Art mandalas to stir a new cosmic sensibility -- play off against one another and against a vivid chartreuse background the artist selected, creating, as Bailey puts it, "an installation of textile vibration whose primary function is the evocation of a patch of Paradise."

Bailey is also the society's first artist-in-residence, an appointment that includes a slide- and video-illustrated public talk that she'll give tomorrow, a crochet workshop -- "a needle tea party," Bailey says -- for beginning to experienced participants starting Saturday, the creation of a new body of work and a project with young people from the Neighborhood Centers Association at the Limbaugh Community Center on the North Side. She'll stay in Pittsburgh through Aug. 30.

Her medium is cotton, but the way Bailey handles it makes her a prime candidate for inclusion in the society's biennial "Bridge" exhibition series, which was begun in 1988 to show contemporary artwork that breaks down traditional barriers between the fields of craft and fine art. ("Bridge 7" also includes solo exhibitions by metalsmith Lin Stanionis and glass artist Dana Zamecnikova.)

While at the University of Washington, where she studied ethnomusicology, she'd taken classes in costume design and found the non-European component lacking. After completing a degree in industrial design at the Pratt Institute in 1977, she learned to crochet from an Italian-Swiss teacher she met while working as an artist-in-community in the Brooklyn school system. Later, she sought out "Sister Joseph," who taught her to tat while regaling the young artist with tales of "lords and ladies of the needle" from a time when "work from the needle was more valuable than any [gem]stone."

With a growing awareness of feminist and civil rights issues, Bailey began to create a wardrobe that radiated a new kind of power by fusing the celebratory colors of African art, the finery of ritual attire and the materials and methods of domestic craft to challenge the low status previously granted "women's work." Tiered hats that are part sculpture, part architecture have titles such as "Water, 1997 (Medicine Hat)." The piece that's in the collection of the American Craft Museum in New York is a coat, Bailey says.

In recent years, she's cranked her expression up a notch, from functional -- albeit unique -- ware to abstract compositions that swirl across the wall in the manner of Frank Stella.

Bright celestial bodies born of her ideology swirl in overlapping energy fields rather than orbits, prodding boundaries of perception, exploring the "possibility of conducting emotional energies into the atmosphere through light and color." She uses the circle because it's "the most primal thing I could thing of."

Concrete limbo

The notion of a universal whole permeates Bailey's expression, underlying her definition of funk: "the constructive energy of the decomposing elements of nature." As in, she explains, cow dung being used to fertilize gardens or grapes fermenting into wine.

The antithesis of this would be littering in the city. "Once you've thrown something onto concrete, you've thrown something out of the cycle of life. On the land, french fries will return to the earth. Newspapers, cups, food thrown onto New York City streets turn into surface garbage because they're in this concrete limbo."

Bailey, who was born in Seattle in 1958, marched to her own drummer from the beginning. (As an adult, she took the name Xenobia, meaning "jewel of my father," after a warrior queen of ancient Palmyra, she says.)

While her family of six was not wealthy -- her parents owned a janitorial business, and she helped to clean three restaurants before school every day -- her childhood held idyllic experiences such as picking wild blackberries and raspberries, sleeping on the back porch and building a tree house in a cherry tree. As a Bluebird, she learned respect for nature, along with survival skills.

She made her first go-cart by wrecking her doll buggy so she could get the wheels. "I made the best car," she says. "The buggy wasn't doing anything for me. The doll gets a buggy; I needed a go-cart."

Bailey grew up near Chinatown and attended a Buddhist nursery school begun by restaurateur Ruby Chow, whom she holds in high regard. When local women wanted to work but couldn't afford day care, Chow started the nursery school. "All her power came from her being a woman," Bailey says.

Neighborhood

The clothing she created for her "Sister Paradise" is "based on the Chinese girls' drill team of Seattle," something else Chow began, Bailey says, breaking into a description of their "red and turquoise uniforms, ballet slippers, gongs -- so magnificent" as though she'd seen them yesterday. The story she created for "Sister Paradise" -- of a goddess searching for her disappearing people, joining them in slavery in America and using her magic to spirit them back to Africa -- is her own.

And she is a compilation of the Pacific-facing West Coast, a local American Indian presence, a European national heritage, African-American roots, immersion in a diversity of philosophical processes and religions, and the open-mindedness to embrace them all.

Describing a "really beautiful" spirits-of-the-harvest ceremony conducted by Haitians in Harlem, Bailey said, "It's all about ancestors and the earth and the creative and respect of life and rejuvenating that. And the different religions are just different styles of that."

Thinking of her childhood, Bailey says, "Every day was almost like summer because it was a neighborhood. It was a magical time, but I didn't get a portrait of that."

That's one reason she wants to incorporate portraiture into her project with the children, to document the "everyday people that add to the fiber of a community. These children add joy every time you see them."

To that end, she's completing a mandala today, its center subdued in evening greens and blues, to represent the New Moon that rises tonight. The children's portraits will be taken in front of the New Moon, placing them in the cosmos, "coming into being."

"If you want to be included in a script, you gotta write it yourself," Bailey says. "I want them to see jubilation."