Ms. Dynamite
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VIDEO CLIP : Ms. Dynamite – Neva Soft
via wuzzmag.com
<p>Exclusive Ms Dynamite performs for Rock The Belles @East Village from BrownBear Style on Vimeo.</p>
Ms. Dynamite
![]()
VIDEO CLIP : Ms. Dynamite – Neva Soft
via wuzzmag.com
<p>Exclusive Ms Dynamite performs for Rock The Belles @East Village from BrownBear Style on Vimeo.</p>
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Call for Book Chapters:
Migration and African Families in the Diaspora
Deadline: 30 September 2011The unique role of first and second generation African immigrants in the United States is a subject of interest and debate among researchers. Africans may be one of the highest outbound peoples on the globe. Incidentally, neither the impact of migration on Africans in the Diaspora nor its future consequences for the continent have been sufficiently addressed in research. In recent times, however, the subject of migration or migrancy is assuming center stage in academic circles, among researchers, policy makers, world organizations, and the like. Many agree that migration is, indeed, reshaping the national, self and cultural identities of both migrants and their host nations.
Migration and African Families in the Diaspora is a planned volume conceptualized to provide an update on the status of African families in the Diaspora, with specific focus on the United States. How, for instance, is migration reshaping African family structures and gender dynamics? How does it impact the African’s sense of identity and culture? What gaps exist between first generation and second generation African immigrants in their conception of self, place, home? These are some of the issues that this book is bound to address in order to provide an updated and scholarly assessment on the subject of African migration. The book’s scope will cover African migration to North America in the last forty years.
Interested contributors may send a 200- word abstract for consideration to Dr. Pauline Ada Uwakweh at pauwakwe@ncat.edu, not later than September 30, 2011.
Using any of these five broad categories including Culture, Family, Education, Politics, Health Care and Wellness, contributors may find the following list of themes, though not exhaustive, a useful guide.
• Intergenerational culture conflict
• Bicultural parenting and identity issues
• Role of African cultural associations/cultural communities: national and ethnic identities
• Migrant African parenting in the Diaspora: motherhood, fatherhood, child rearing, single motherhood, single fatherhood
• Migrant African teens and Diaspora peer influence
• Migrant African families and indigenous languages: problems and prospects
• Migrant African families: representations in literature and the media
• Religion, spirituality, and the African family in the Diaspora
• Violence, conflict, mediation and migrant African family experiences
• Negotiating Gender roles: employment, career and culture intersections
• Migrant voices: Narratives of despair, hope and nostalgia
• Migrant African intra marriages vs. ethnic and national identity.
• Migrant African inter marriages and the Diaspora ‘other’
• Migrant families and Healthcare: access, perceptions of mental health, obesity, nutrition, etc.
• Education and migrant African families in the U.S.A.: access, opportunities and challenges
• Education vs. culture: assimilation, acculturation and the American classroom
• Education and career advancement
• Politics and migrant Africans: opportunities and engagement, challenges and barriers.Chapter Submission Requirements
All submissions are expected to comply with the requirements below.
• Chapters should be original and well-researched. Interdisciplinary explorations are encouraged.
• Submissions should be a maximum of 20 pages ( not including references, abstracts, tables and figures), double-spaced, and in 12 point Times New Roman. More details will be provided.
• Authors should include a 200-word abstract of the chapter, 50–word biography, email, institutional addresses and contact numbers.Book Timeline
September 30, 2011: Deadline for abstracts
January 3, 2012: Deadline for submitting book chapter drafts
April 15, 2012: Deadline for submitting revised chapters
June 1, 2012: Deadline for submitting manuscript to publisher.
EDITORS
Dr. Pauline Ada Uwakweh
Assistant Professor
Department of English, College of Arts and Sciences
North Carolina A & T State University
pauwakwe@ncat.edu.
Office: (336) 285-2343. Fax: (336) 334-3342Dr. Jerono Rotich
Associate Professor
Department of Human Performance & Services, School of Education
North Carolina A & T State University
jprotich@ncat.edu
Office: (336) 334- 7712. Fax: 334-7258Dr. Comfort Okpala
Associate Professor
Department of Human Development and Services, School of Education
North Carolina A & T State University
cookpala@ncat.edu
Office: (336) 285-4365. Fax: 336) 334-7132Contact Information:
For inquiries: pauwakwe@ncat.edu
For submissions: pauwakwe@ncat.edu
2011 Newport Review Flash Fiction Contest
Now Accepting Entries!
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$500 in Prizes
All Stories Considered for Publication
Guest Judge: Meg Pokrass, author of Damn Sure Right (Press 53, 2011)
Contest Guidelines:
Format: Original, unpublished flash fiction stories, including prose poetry and experimental forms.
Deadline: Opens June 1, 2011, at midnight; Closes October 1, 2011, at 11:59 p.m.
Word Count: Stories up to 1,000 words maximum; no minimum
Entry fee: $8 for one story; 3 for $21
How to Submit: Please submit online using our automated submission manager. Choose "Flash Fiction Contest" as the genre of your entry. You will be prompted to pay before submitting stories.
- Writers may submit a total of six entries.
- The contest is open to all writers ages 13 and above, except writers who have close personal affiliations with Newport Review, its editorial staff, contest judges or advisory board. Past contest winners and those who have been published in past issues of Newport Review are eligible to enter.
- Winners will be notified and posted on our blog and web site.
- Submit online through Submishmash, our online submission system. Make sure you choose "Contest Entry" as your category.
- Questions about contest rules (NOT entries) may be addressed to edit (at) newportreview.org.
$500 in prizes, along with publication, will be awarded.First Prize: $250 and publication in Newport Review
Second Prize: $150 and publication in Newport Review
Third Prize: $100 and publication in Newport Review
Honorable Mention: Publication in Newport Review
Prize-winning stories will be published in the Winter 2012 issue of Newport Review. Other stories may also be considered for publication.
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SUMMER 2011 FLASH FICTION CONTEST
OVERVIEW:
WOW! hosts a (quarterly) writing contest every three months. The mission of this contest is to inspire creativity, communication, and well-rewarded recognition to contestants. The contest is open globally; age is of no matter; and entries must be in English. We are open to all styles of writing, although we do encourage you to take a close look at our guest judge for the season (upper right hand corner) and the flavor of our sponsor, if you are serious about winning. We love creativity, originality, and light-hearted reads. That's not to say that our guest judge will feel the same... so go wild! Express yourself, and most of all, let's have some fun!
WORD COUNT:
Maximum: 750
Minimum: 250
The title is not to be counted in your word count. We use MS Word's word count to determine the submitted entry's word count.
PROMPT:
OPEN PROMPT!
That’s right, this is your chance to shine, and get creative. You can write about anything, as long as it’s within the word count and fiction. So, dig out those stories you started way back when and tailor them to the word count.
We’re open to any style and genre. From horror to romance! So, get creative, and most of all, have fun.
Click to Download the SUMMER 2011 FLASH FICTION Contest Terms & Conditions PDF
CONTEST DEADLINES:
FALL: September - November 30th Midnight (Pacific Time) - CLOSEDWINTER: December - February 28th, Midnight (Pacific Time) - CLOSED
SPRING: March - May 31st, Midnight (Pacific Time) - CLOSED
SUMMER: June - August 31st, Midnight (Pacific Time) - NOW OPEN! NOW OPEN!-->
ENTRY FEE: $10.00
This is not a reading fee. Entry fees are used to award our 20 winners as well as administrative costs.
We are limiting the number of entries to a maximum of 300 stories. Please enter early to ensure inclusion. If we reach 300 entries, we will disable the PayPal buttons.
Buy Entry Only: $10.00 CLOSED-->Buy Entry Only: $10.00
OR
Buy Entry with Critique: $20.00 CLOSED
--> Buy Entry with Critique: $20.00
ADDITIONAL OPTION: Due to popular demand, we now have two options for your entry. For an additional $10.00 you can purchase a critique of your contest entry.
Upon the close of our contest, and after the winners are announced, you will receive a critique from one of our round table judges on four categories:
- Subject
- Content
- Technical
- Overview
You will be provided with your scores (1-5) in each category, and personal editorial feedback for each category as well. Please be patient upon the close of our contest and allow time for our editors to thoroughly critique your piece. We send out critiques after the contest winners are announced to ensure fairness.
PRIZES: 20 WINNERS TOTAL!
FIRST PLACE:
- $300.00 cash prize
- 1 Year Premium Membership to AutomatedEditing.com ($360 value)
- $25 Amazon Gift Certificate
- An e-book pack
- Entry published on WOW! Women On Writing
- Interview on the WOW! Women On Writing Blog
SECOND PLACE:
- $200.00 cash prize
- 1 Year Standard Membership to AutomatedEditing.com ($240 value)
- $25 Amazon Gift Certificate
- An e-book pack
- Entry published on WOW! Women On Writing
- Interview on the WOW! Women On Writing Blog
THIRD PLACE:
- $100.00 cash prize
- 1 Year Standard Membership to AutomatedEditing.com ($240 value)
- $25 Amazon Gift Certificate
- An e-book pack
- Entry published on WOW! Women On Writing
- Interview on the WOW! Women On Writing Blog
7 RUNNERS UP:
- $25 Amazon Gift Certificate
- An e-book pack
- Entry published on WOW! Women On Writing
- Interview on the WOW! Women On Writing Blog
10 HONORABLE MENTIONS:
- $20 Amazon Gift Certificate
- An e-book pack
- Name, state, and title entry published on WOW! Women On Writing
Click to Download the SUMMER 2011 FLASH FICTION Contest Terms & Conditions PDF
You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to view the PDF. Download the latest version at http://www.adobe.com
Please read the contest terms & conditions in full before submitting your entry. Please make sure you read the FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) before sending us an email.
Please Note: Previous winners who placed 1st, 2nd, or 3rd are allowed to reenter all contests!
Best of luck!
August Wilson On Blackness…
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Interesting conversation between August Wilson and Bill Moyers from 1988 (thanks Bev Smith for the link); Wilson’s name is one that’s come up a number of times on S&A. His controversial I Want A Black Director op-ed from about 20 years ago immediately comes to mind. I think I’ve shared that here two or three times, given the subject matter and our interests.
The conversation below centers primarily on this thing we call blackness; what it means, how to define it, etc. Long time readers of S&A will know that we’ve tackled the matter several times, and will likely continue to.
From the few essays I’ve read by Wilson, and interviews I’ve watched with the man on the issue of blackness, I don’t entirely agree with his take, which I think is too rigid; I long decided for myself that it’s simply just not definable, and any attempt to do so will be a frustrating, fruitless endeavor, since we can’t universally agree on what that is. Our experiences (the experiences of black people all over the world) are far too varied to validate the notion of some singular, “identifiable blackness.”
I’m not implying that we shouldn’t wrestle with the question, especially as artist and cultural critics… I do constantly; but not necessarily with the goal being to reach a definite answer, because I just don’t think there is one; at least not a universal one. Maybe it’s a personal, individual thing.
However, I’ve always enjoyed listening to Wilson, and greatly appreciate his work.
Of most interest in the clip is his derision of The Cosby Show; I remember one of Sergio’s previous post in which he also derided the series, but not quite for the same reasons that Wilson does. While Sergio found it “bland” and “dull” as a series, Wilson just didn’t think it represented “blackness.”
But the whole 15-minute clip is worth a viewing, as it touches on topics that frequently arise here on S&A.
The Fallacy of
Touré's Post-Blackness Theory
In his latest book, the cultural critic argues that
African Americans should never have their racial loyalty
or authenticity questioned. This reviewer disagrees.
- | Posted: August 11, 2011 at 12:53 AM
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African Americans fight a multifront struggle in pursuing their ambitions. Along with the difficulties that others face -- bad luck, personal deficiencies, talented competitors -- blacks face additional obstacles. On one front they encounter prejudiced Caucasians. On another they encounter Negroes who, attached to stunted conceptions of racial solidarity, habitually castigate as disloyal blacks perceived as "acting white," being "oreos," "selling out."
Blacks characteristically confront white racism with uninhibited fury. With black critics, however, they often display ambivalence. Even when chafing miserably from constraints imposed by racial solidarity, many blacks nonetheless bite their tongues. They refrain from speaking openly and frankly because the rhetoric and performance of racial solidarity occupies an honored position in black American circles. It has claims on blacks' psyches even as they wrestle with the restraints that solidarity entails.
In Who's Afraid of Post-Blackness: What It Means to Be Black Now (Free Press), Touré assails "self-appointed identity cops" who write "Authenticity Violations as if they were working for Internal Affairs making sure everyone does Blackness in the right way." His aim is to "destroy the idea that there is a correct or legitimate way of doing Blackness," maintaining that "if there's a right way then there must be a wrong way, and that [that] kind of thinking cuts us off from exploring the full potential of Black humanity." Touré claims that he wants African Americans to have the freedom to be black in whatever ways they choose and that he aspires "to banish from the collective mind the bankrupt, fraudulent concept of 'authentic' Blackness."
"Post-Blackness" is the label Touré deploys to describe the sensibility he champions, a "modern individualist Blackness" that enthusiastically endorses novelty and diversity, fluidity and experimentation. "Post-Blackness," he insists, "is not a box, it's an unbox. It opens the door to everything. It's open-ended and open-sourced and endlessly customizable. It's whatever you want it to be." "Post-Blackness" means, he says, that "we are [like President Barack Obama] rooted in, but not restricted by, Blackness."
Touré, a 40-year-old author of three previous books, a contributing editor to Rolling Stone and a correspondent for MSNBC, is a keen student and practitioner of publicity who rounds up a posse of artists, scholars and journalists to assist with the promotion of his brand of "post-Blackness."
In Who's Afraid of Post-Blackness, he prominently features, for example, professor Michael Eric Dyson. "We've got to do away with the notion," Dyson writes, "that there's something that all Black folk have to believe in order to be Black. We've got to give ourselves permission to divide into subgroups, or out-groups, organized around what we like and dislike, and none of us is less or more Black for doing so."
"The undeniable need to fight oppression," Dyson declares, "can't overshadow the freedom to live and think Blackness just as we please." "Post-Blackness," he insists, "has little patience for racial patriotism, racial fundamentalism, and racial policing."
Selling Out or Not?
Touré and his allies are right to be concerned about charges of racial disloyalty. As I showed in Sellout: The Politics of Racial Betrayal, the specter of defection occupies a salient place in the African-American mind and soul. It figures in novels (such as Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man), in films (Spike Lee's Bamboozled), in hip-hop (the Geto Boys' "No Sell Out") and in writings questioning whether blacks have an obligation to reside in "the hood," marry within the race or decline certain careers, such as prosecutor.
Anxieties over racial loyalty are echoed in incantations such as "Don't forget where you come from" and "Stay black." They are glimpsed in the obsessive scrutiny of prominent blacks for evidence of inadequate commitment to black solidarity.
These fears prompt blacks, especially those in elite, predominantly white settings, to signal conspicuously their allegiance to blackness. This angst contributes to the rise of what journalist John Blake termed "soul patrols," cliques of black folk "who impose their definition of blackness on other black people." Writing in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in 1992, in an article that Touré could have usefully cited, Blake complained that soul patrols are not content with choosing your friends. "They want to tell you how to think, where to live, how to do your job."
Touré's principal complaint with those he sneeringly dismisses as racial-identity police is that their disapproval trenches on personal freedom. He wants black people to be able to do what they please, free of inhibitory racial expectations. He wants blacks to be able to occupy offices as corporate or governmental chief executives without being immediately hectored as sellouts.
He wants African Americans to be able to have nonblack romantic partners without facing charges of racial abandonment. He wants Negroes out in public to be able to eat fried chicken or watermelon without feeling that they are disgracing the race. He wants black artists to be able to play with depictions of slavery, segregation or anything else without being indicted for defaming Afro-America.
Call the Blackness Police
Touré rightly assails principles or tactics that impose wrongful constraints on blacks (or anyone else). He errs, however, when he adopts a stance of libertarian absolutism, according to which it is always wrong for one black person to question another black person's fidelity to black America. This is the stance taken by Stephen L. Carter in Confessions of an Affirmative Action Baby, in which he wrote, "Loving our people and loving our culture does not require any restriction on what black people can think or say or do or be ... "
No restriction? But what about an African American who expresses racial hatred for blacks? Or what about an African American who joins a legitimate black-uplift organization for the purpose of crippling it? Blacks (or anyone else) who do or say such things ought to be shunned as forcefully as possible in order to punish them, render them ineffective and dissuade others from following a similar course.
Some ideas ought to be stifled. Determining what ideas should meet that fate under what circumstances and by what means are large, complex, daunting questions that warrant the most careful attention. The world is awash in destructive censorship. And the broad swath of cultural freedom that has been painstakingly won in the United States is a treasure for which Americans should be willing to fight. At the same time, it bears repeating that under some circumstances, people behaving in certain ways -- which includes the expression of certain ideas -- ought to be ostracized.
Touré is rightly appalled by the pettiness, narrowness, bigotry and dictatorial character of those who have intermittently afflicted Negroes with destructive bouts of internecine warfare. Hence the purgings committed by proponents of Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association, Elijah Muhammad's Nation of Islam and H. Rap Brown's Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. "We've all heard and felt," Touré observes, "the Blackness police among us -- or within us -- judging and convicting and sentencing and verbally or mentally casting people out of the race for large and small offenses."
What Does It Mean to Be Black?
Touré's response is to so broaden the boundaries of blackness that no black person can properly be "convicted" of straying outside. In this post-black era, Touré writes, "the definitions and boundaries of Blackness are expanding ... into infinity ... [O]ur identity options are limitless." According to Touré, "Blackness is not a club you can be expelled from ... We've been arguing for decades and decades about identity and authenticity and who's Black and who's not and I want to yell above the din -- Truce! We're all Black! We all win!"
There are several problems here. First, Touré himself does not fully believe in the unbounded conceptions of blackness or post-blackness that he sometimes seems to propound. "Our commonality," he writes, "is too diverse, complex, imaginative, dynamic, fluid, creative, and beautiful to impose restraints on Blackness."
To what, however, does he refer to when he says "our"? For "our" to have meaning, it must have some boundary that separates "us" from "them." If post-black opens the door to everything, does that mean thatanyone can rightly be deemed "Black"? Just suppose that Glenn Beck and Bill O'Reilly, as a joke, declared themselves to be black. If there really are no restraints on blackness, no boundaries distinguishing "Blacks" from "non-Blacks," then it follows that there would be no basis on which to deny their claim. That, in my view, would be unsatisfactory.
What Touré and his allies seek to escape are fundamental aspects of any community: boundaries and discipline. Every community -- be it a family, firm or nation-state -- necessarily has boundaries that distinguish members from nonmembers. That boundary is a constituent element of the community's existence.
Touré could opt to reject affiliations that are organized around racial identity. He could abandon blackness or post-blackness or any and all racial labelings and groupings. But Touré eschews that option. It is, among other things, all too unpopular for his taste.
Despite his avant-garde pretensions, Touré is at bottom rather conventional: a politically liberal black guy who wants to make it in the white-dominated world of print journalism and television broadcasting without catching flak from "brothas" and "sistahs" because of the way he talks (preppy), because of his significant other (a woman who is not African American) and because of his attachment to ideas that he knows some blacks will disdain.
Touré voices, for instance, an instrumental patriotism: "We may need to more fully embrace our American-ness in order to maximize the power we have as individuals and as a collective." He praises "Black people who can make the leap to loving and trusting white people" because these African Americans "have far more ability [than others] to climb the ladders of power." He frankly propounds a preference for insiderism:
We need more and more Blacks sitting at tables of real power. Let's be like Barack and get what we want from America in spite of racism ... Let's buy into the promise of America and get what we deserve: a place in the American life lottery. Let's come home. You can fight the power, but I want us to be the power.
Aware that some African Americans will see in these beliefs an ugly ethic of racial brownnosing aimed merely at attaining robust tokenism, Touré seeks a general truce whereby blacks forgo judging the racial politics of one another. But that aim is futile; judgment is inevitable.
Touré claims to accept as equally "Black" all beliefs advanced by African Americans. But he doesn't really believe this. He insists repeatedly, for instance, that he is no "oreo" -- an inauthentic Negro -- black on the outside but white on the inside. In saying that he is not an oreo, however, Touré concedes that someone is.
Touré supports the continuation of blacks as a distinct community in America. He situates himself in a racialized "we": "We Blacks." He views his book as a contribution to a more effective and enlightened black collective action. Collective action, however, requires coordination; coordination requires discipline; and discipline requires coercion.
Consider the magnificent Montgomery Bus Boycott triggered by the arrest of Rosa Parks. The boycott is typically portrayed as an entirely voluntary enterprise in which the heroes of the story wage their struggle against racist villains without morally soiling their hands. The reality, however, was considerably more complicated. The boycott was mainly animated by the commitment of blacks to resisting Jim Crow oppression. It was also reinforced, however, by fear. While few African Americans rode the buses, more would have, had they not feared reprisal.
Improper policing can indeed impinge unduly on individual freedoms, prompt excessive self-censorship, truncate needed debate and nurture demagoguery. But policing is part of the unavoidable cost of group maintenance. That is why all nations have criminal laws, including prohibitions against treason.
Boycotting Clarence Thomas
To the extent that Touré wants to perpetuate black communities but eschew policing, he seeks a sociological impossibility. The erection of boundaries and the enforcement of stigmatization, including the threat of expulsion, are inescapable, albeit dangerous, aspects of any collective enterprise.
Some folks ought to have their racial credentials lifted. Consider Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas -- the most vilified black official in American history, a man whose very name has become synonymous with selling out. Many organizations, including scores of law schools, refuse to bestow any semblance of prestige or support through association with him. He is being massively boycotted. And like all boycotts, this one is coercive. It applies pressure to the target.
It also applies pressure to third parties, threatening with disapproval those who might cross the boycotters' picket line. The boycott of Thomas is largely monitored by blacks who detest his reactionary politics and rue his paradoxical success in exploiting black racial loyalism. Remember that but for his appeal for protection against a "high-tech lynching," he would probably have failed to win senatorial confirmation to the seat once occupied by Thurgood Marshall.
Is it right for blacks to cast Thomas from their communion? Is it appropriate to indict him for betrayal? These questions have arisen on numerous occasions. In confronting them now, I conclude that I have erred in the past. Previously I have criticized Thomas' performance as a jurist -- his complacent acceptance of policies that unjustly harm those tragically vulnerable to ingrained prejudices; his naked Republican Party parochialism; and his proud, Palinesque ignorance. But I have also chastised those who labeled him a sellout.
I was a sap. Blacks should ostracize Thomas as persona non grata. Despite his parentage, physiognomy and racial self-identification, he ought to be put outside of respectful affiliation with black folk because of his indifference or hostility to their collective condition. His conduct has been so hurtful to and antagonistic toward the black American community that he ought to be expelled from membership in it.
Touré rejects the idea that an African American can ever properly be dismissed from the race -- "de-blacked," to use the memorable term coined by Washington University professor Kimberly Jade Norwood. How one stands on this matter depends on how one conceptualizes racial membership. Some view racial membership as an immutable status -- you are born black and that is it. I do not. I view choice as an integral element of membership. In my view, a person (or at least an adult person) should be black by choice, with a recognized right of resignation.
Carrying through with that contractualist conception, I also believe that a black person should have no immunity from being de-blacked. Any Negro should be subject to having his or her membership in blackness revoked if he or she pursues a course of conduct that convincingly demonstrates the absence of even a minimal communal allegiance.
Religions impose excommunication. Nations revoke citizenship. Parents disown children. Children disown parents. Why, as a matter of principle, should blacks be disallowed from casting from their community those adjudged to be enemies of it? The power of expulsion is so weighty that prudence should demand extraordinary care in exercising it. Still, the power to exclude and expel is, and should be, part of what constitutes black America.
Unlike the United States, individual states or Indian tribes, black America lacks mechanisms of sovereignty -- courts, for example -- that can provide centralized, authoritative and enforceable judgments regarding membership. In black America, only an amorphous public opinion adjudicates such matters, generating inconclusive results. Nonetheless, black public opinion should and does exercise some control over its communal boundary, determining in the process a person's standing as member, guest, enemy and so on.
Keeping It Real
Opposed to the idea of racial boundaries, Touré is also against the idea of racial authenticity. His opening chapter is titled "Thirty-Five Million Ways to Be Black," an homage to a statement he attributes to Henry Louis Gates Jr.:
If there are thirty-five million Black Americans then there are thirty-five million ways to be Black. There are ten billion cultural artifacts of Blackness and if you add them up and put them in a pot and stew it, that's what Black culture is. Not one of those things is more authentic than the other.
Recall that one of Touré's aims is "to banish from the collective mind the bankrupt, fraudulent concept of 'authentic' Blackness." That aim is misleading. To be sure, there are numerous instances in which blacks' racial authenticity has been challenged on spurious grounds by people claiming that "real" blacks don't (fill in the blank) fence, ski, enjoy Mozart, climb mountains, study hard, etc. These ignorant suppositions have generated destructive consequences -- shriveling expectations, discouraging curiosity, reinforcing stereotypes.
One should differentiate, however, between specious and defensible notions of racial authenticity. Out of frustration with the former, Touré throws out the latter. Authentic blackness can be discerned by comparing it with performances in which people self-consciously dilute their artistry or message to give it "crossover" appeal. Whether such dilution is warranted or not in a given circumstance is not the immediate point. The point is simply that in some circumstances, African Americans do vary the racial character of their performances, and the language of authenticity is one way of noting that variation.
When African-American artists, politicians or activists assert that they are going to "keep it real" despite complaints that they are "too black," they are adopting a stance that is important to appreciate even if one disagrees with it. That stance, like the strategy of dilution, is no figment of the imagination. It is a choice that gives rise to different grades of blackness. That is why it is proper, Henry Louis Gates notwithstanding, to recognize that the music of James Brown at the Apollo is more authentically black than the music of the Supremes at the Copacabana.
Racial solidarity will always depend to some extent on self-appointed monitors of racial virtue. Touré himself, of course, is just such a monitor. His chiding of black political correctness is itself a variant of black political correctness.
Those who want to maintain black community while containing the peer pressure that makes collective action possible must recognize that solidarity always poses a problem of balance between unity and freedom. That is why libertarian romanticism is untenable when conjoined with a desire for collective advancement.
Randall Kennedy is the Michael R. Klein Professor of Law at Harvard University and the author of The Persistence of the Color Line: Racial Politics and the Obama Presidency.
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Screenings We Love ::
Rubble Kings
Our homies Shan Nicholson & Ben Velez has done it again!
On their last film Nicholson & Valez took us to the magical nightlife of downtown 1980′s NYC in DOWNTOWN CALLING- This time they takes us a little further back, and brings the rough gang ridden streets of 1970′s NYC with them. If you thought you had an idea of how real NYC was back in the day, take a deep breathe cuz shit’s about to get real.
About the Screening:
We’ll be hosting the NYC premiere of our second feature documentary, RUBBLE KINGS as invited Feature Documentary in the HBO NY INTERNATIONAL LATINO FILM FESTIVAL. RUBBLE KINGS is the most comprehensive documentation of the outlaw gang era of NYC and features an abundance of rare footage and photography, as well as interviews with key historical figures from both sides of the law to tell how a few, extraordinary and forgotten people did the impossible, and how their actions impacted the world over.The screening date/time is Thursday, August 18th at 9pm. We will be there and hosting a q&a session afterwards, and many of the amazing cast members – mostly original NYC outlaws – will be in attendance, as well.
RUBBLE KINGSAMC Empire 18, 9:00 PM Thu, Aug 18234 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036-7215Being that the film is just in festival mode right now, I cannot say when the next opportunity to see the film will be, so make sure you come out!
Here’s a link for purchasing tickets and theatre address / info – we sold out very quickly last year so if you plan on coming, make sure you get yours soon!
Thanks for all of your support over the years,
Shan & Ben
RUBBLE KINGS
@rubblekings
@downtowncalling
"If We Don't Riot,
You Don't Listen to Us":
The Case for Chaos
- August 10, 2011 • 2:30 pm PDT
- 322 responses
By the looks of our news outlets, very few members of the press covering the London riots, now in their fourth day, seem to think it wise to speak to the rioters themselves. There are a lot of conversations with analysts and political figures of all types (this one with writer Darcus Howe is important viewing), but when it comes to the people actually burning the buildings, much of the media seems content to stand back and take pictures of silhouettes running away from flaming buildings. That's a shame for a lot of reasons, but especially because many of those kids, violent or not, have trenchant things to say.Perhaps the most significant interview to come out of the riots thus far wasn't a direct Q&A, but a statement overheard by an MSNBC reporter eavesdropping on a British TV crew. The crew asked a young black man if rioting was the correct way to express unhappiness:
"Yes," said the young man. "You wouldn't be talking to me now if we didn't riot, would you?"
The TV reporter from Britain's ITV had no response. So the young man pressed his advantage. "Two months ago we marched to Scotland Yard, more than 2,000 of us, all blacks, and it was peaceful and calm and you know what? Not a word in the press. Last night a bit of rioting and looting and look around you."
Eavesdropping from among the onlookers, I looked around. A dozen TV crews and newspaper reporters interviewing the young men everywhere.
That boy, whoever he was, was telling the truth. In April, 1,000 people turned out for a peaceful march to Scotland Yard after reggae singer Smiley Culture died at home during a police raid, supposedly of a self-inflicted stab wound. Culture's supporters asked for nothing but a proper police inquest into his death. "We just really want to know how, how our loved one died and get to the truth of it," said Culture's nephew. "It really is quite simple."
Unless you pay close attention to London news, it's unlikely you heard about Culture's death or the march against police violence it sparked. But both of those things happened, and British young people aren't lying when they say they've looked for peaceful solutions to the problem of clashes with cops. Does that mean that everyone with a serious unaddressed grievance should burn down their local shopping mall? Not at all. But it does help make sense of poor people destroying their own communities in the name of progress.
photo via (cc) Flickr user NightFall404
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The crowds involved in violence and looting are drawn from a complex mix of social and racial backgrounds
The crowd gathered outside Chalk Farm tube station at 1am on Tuesday morning was representative of those who had been at the frontline of other riots over the previous 72 hours.
Anyone who has witnessed the disturbances up close will know there is no simple answer to the question: who are the rioters? Attempts to use simple categorisations to describe the looters belies the complex make-up of those who have been participating.
Some who have been victims of the looting resent attempts to rationalise or give meaning to what they perceive as the mindless thuggery of an "underclass". Others want an explanation of who has been taking part – and why.
In the broadest sense, most of those involved have been young men from poor areas. But the generalisation cannot go much further than that. It can't be said that they are largely from one racial group. Both young men and women have joined in.
Take events in Chalk Farm, north London. First the streets contained people of all backgrounds sprinting off with bicycles looted from Evans Cycles. Three Asian men in their 40s, guarding a newsagent, discussed whether they should also take advantage of the apparent suspension of law.
"If we go for it now, we can get a bike," said one. "Don't do it," said another. Others were not so reticent; a white woman and a man emerged carrying a bike each. A young black teenager, aged about 14, came out smiling, carrying another bike, only for it be snatched from him by an older man.
They were just some of the crowd of about 100 who had gathered on the corner; a mix of the curious and angry, young and old. It was impossible to distinguish between thieves, bystanders and those who simply wanted to cause damage.
A group of about 20 youths were wielding scaffolding poles taken from a nearby building site. They used their makeshift weapons, along with bricks and stolen bottles of wine, to intermittently attack passing motorists or smash bus shelters. A man in a slim suit stood on the corner recording the violence on his mobile phone.
Most of those he was filming had covered their faces. One had a full balaclava with holes cut out only for the eyes and mouth. "Is that you, bruv?" an older man, aged about 30, hands in pockets, asked the man in the balaclava. Recognising his friend, he laughed and added: "Fuck. Don't stand near me – you're going to get me arrested."
Seconds later there was a smash as the minicab office around the corner was broken into. Teenagers swarmed in, shouting: "Bwap, bwap, bwap."
The arrival of a line of riot police from Camden, where a branch of Sainsbury's and clothing stores had been looted an hour earlier, signalled it was time for everyone to move on.
But there was no rush; the group knew from experience that police would hold back for the time being. "Keep an eye on the Feds, man," said one youth.
Overheard snippets of conversation gave an insight into how the disparate groups were deciding where to go.
One man said: "Hampstead, bruv. Let's go rob Hampstead." Another, looking at his BlackBerry, said: "Kilburn, it's happening in Kilburn and Holloway." A third added: "The whole country is burning, man."
And as multi-ethnic areas from London to Birmingham, Liverpool and Bristol burned, a myth was being dispelled: that so-called "black youths" are largely behind such violence.
In Tottenham on Saturday many of those who gathered at the police station to protest against the shooting of Mark Duggan were, like him, black. But others were Asian and white.
By the following day, as the looting spread to other north London suburbs, there appeared to have been a slight shift in the demographic, which started to look younger. In Enfield most of those who gathered in the town centre were white. The youngest looked about 10-years-old.
Those taking part in the battles in Hackney's Pembury estate on Monday included many women. Teenage girls helped carry debris to form the burning barricades or made piles of rocks.
One, with a yellow scarf across her face, was seemingly at the forefront. She helped set a motorbike alight, walking away with her hands aloft. Other women shouted instructions from the windows of nearby flats and houses.
"Croydon is burning down," shouted one woman who looked about 40, from her flat above a shop. Another warned the crowd when police were spotted nearby.
The mix was visible around the same time several miles south, near Peckham High Street. The fact that many youths covered their faces with masks made identifying them almost impossible.
A few young men sculpted impromptu masks out of stolen pharmacy bags, making them resemble members of the youth wing of the Ku Klux Klan. An older girl with them reached into a bag and pulled out a giant bag of Haribo sweets. The atmosphere was akin to a school sports day or a visit to a rowdy open-air cinema.
A few of them tried in vain to start a fire. The girl handing out sweets said: "Why don't they do the hair shop, have you seen the products they keep in the back?"
When another group finished ransacking a pawnbroker's and started cleaning out a local fashion boutique, an angry young black woman berated one of them. "You're taking the piss, man. That woman hand-stitches everything, she's built that shop up from nothing. It's like stealing from your mum."
A girl holding a looted wedding dress smiled sheepishly, stuck for anything to say.
Jay Kast, 24, a youth worker from East Ham who has witnessed rioting across London over the last three nights, said he was concerned that black community leaders were wrongly identifying a problem "within".
"I've seen Turkish boys, I've seen Asian boys, I've seen grown white men," he said. "They're all out there taking part." He recognised an element of opportunism in the mass looting but said an underlying cause was that many young people felt "trapped in the system". "They're disconnected from the community and they just don't care," he said.
In some senses the rioting has been unifying a cross-section of deprived young men who identify with each other, he added.
Kast gave the example of how territorial markers which would usually delineate young people's residential areas – known as 'endz', 'bits' and 'gates' – appear to have melted away.
"On a normal day it wouldn't be allowed – going in to someone else's area. A lot of them, on a normal day, wouldn't know each other and they might be fighting," Kast said.
"Now they can go wherever they want. They're recognising themselves from the people they see on the TV [rioting]. This is bringing them together."
A late evening walk down the Walworth Road revealed that the Argos and various electrical stores had been smashed up. Police were sealing off banks and retail outlets with tape. A platoon of youths came in from Peckham in the early evening, a man still sweeping up the remains of his shop window said. They cordoned off the road before they began looting, which suggests some level of criminal organisation.
A middle-aged African-Caribbean man explained that some young people were targeting Asian and Afghan shops, the result of petty local disagreements. And there's no denying that a small minority are simply out to hurt people. A Chinese student, the same man said, had been set upon by a gang and beaten quite badly, simply for taking a picture.
All the same, there's more than brute criminality here. When incidents like this happen the authorities are fond of saying that troublemakers have been bussed in from outside.
But there's none of that here. Neither is there any sign of the anti-globalisation or anarchist crowds.
This is unadulterated, indigenous anger and ennui. It's a provocation, a test of will and a hamfisted two-finger salute to the authorities.
• This article was amended on 10 August 2011 to remove references to Afro-Caribbean and Afghani in contravention of Guardian style. This has been corrected.
Additional reporting by Mustafa Khalili
>via: http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2011/aug/09/london-riots-who-took-part?CMP=twt_gu
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Our MPs are 'on message', our media in decline and the Commission for Racial Equality abolished. Who speaks for us?
This is not 1981. Nor 1985. As has been pointed out over the past few days, things have changed a lot since the "inner-city unrest" – as it was quaintly named back then – erupted in Brixton, Tottenham, Toxteth, Handsworth and other parts of Britain.
But with each passing day, the old maxim, "The more things change, the more they stay the same", has increasing relevance. In the 80s, as now, rioting was sparked by a confrontation between black people and the police and spread to the rest of the country, including to "white" areas. In 1981, the Conservative prime minister dismissed suggestions that the Brixton riot was due to unemployment and racism. Time proved that she was badly wrong. But fast forward three decades, and David Cameron tells the House of Commons that this week's rioting was "criminality, pure and simple".
In the years up to 1981, tension had been building between black people and the police over the "sus" laws, which gave officers powers to arrest anyone they suspected may be intending to steal. For them, a black youngster glancing at a handbag was enough. After Brixton, this law was repealed. Today, however, black people are seven times more likely than white people to be stopped and searched. And under the 1994 Criminal Justice and Public Order Act – which allows police to search anyone in a designated area without specific grounds for suspicion – the racial discrepancy rises to 26 times. This is symptomatic of the many ways in which, for black Britons, life seemingly improved but has steadily descended again.
In 1985 there was not a single black MP. The main community voice came from Bernie Grant, then leader of Haringey council. Grant became a media hate figure in the aftermath of the Tottenham riot in which an officer had been killed, when he quoted youngsters gloating that the police had had "a bloody good hiding". However, his connection with local people made him hugely popular and two years later he was elected MP. Similarly, Paul Boateng, who had been a campaigning civil rights lawyer, greeted his own election the same night by declaring: "Today Brent South, tomorrow Soweto."
Today we have a dozen black MPs, including some in the Conservative party, but their backgrounds are a million miles from the community activism of their predecessors. Today's crop, well groomed in spin, ensure they remain on message. "I'm not a black MP, just an MP who happens to be black," is their common refrain. Aside from Diane Abbott (also of the class of 87), can anyone imagine them speaking with the passion of a Grant or Boateng? In the late 80s there were black leaders in three London boroughs. Now there are none. So who, today, speaks for black people?
In 1993 the Commission for Racial Equality, Britain's most powerful anti-discrimination body, gained its first black chairman and was seen as a strong advocate for equal rights. In 2007, under New Labour, it was abolished, and subsumed within the Equality and Human Rights Commission, with much-depleted funds.
In 1982, the first black British newspaper, the Voice, was set up, as the mainstream media showed little interest in the black perspective. Initially it thrived, buoyed by the revenue from public sector equal-opportunities job adverts. Other black newspapers followed – including my own. But one by one they went out of business. The Voice still survives, but as a shadow of its former self, the equality ads having dried up long ago.
In 1999, the Macpherson inquiry into the murder of Stephen Lawrence recognised institutional racism within the police. This led to a sudden interest in diversity and equality in mainstream institutions. On 9/11, though, attention suddenly switched to the Muslim "problem", and black equality was forgotten.
So the problems have festered on, only gaining attention during mini epidemics of gun or knife crime. This week, copycat looting has again shifted attention from the core problems within black communities: poverty, discrimination, disaffection, police harassment, educational underachievement, family breakdown. Some of these are for individuals and communities to address; some require support and a change of mindset by the state.
Over the last three decades we've allowed ourselves to be fooled that, with greater integration, plus a few black faces in sport and entertainment, things have improved. People gush about the growing mixed-race population, supposedly Britain's "beautiful" future. Well, Mark Duggan had a white parent but it didn't make much difference to his prospects.
Today, Cameron could stick to his comfort zone, talking of tough action against gangs and social media, of punishing offenders and welfare spongers. This is destined to fail: as in Iran or Syria, a crackdown won't solve the problem. It will just bring more people into conflict with the law, seeing officers as the enemy. Once that happens, the impact on communities can be devastating.
So no, this is not 1981. In many ways it's worse. Those riots were in their own way aspirational – people thought things could get better. This time all the indicators seem to be pointing downwards.
>via: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/aug/11/black-britons-80s-mps-media
Jason Moran
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"In My Mind" ("Not His Hands!" clip)
<p>"In My Mind" ("Not His Hands!" clip) from Center for Documentary Studies on Vimeo.</p>
“Not His Hands!” is a segment from In My Mind, a new film from the Center for Documentary Studies (CDS) at Duke University documenting Jason Moran and the Big Bandwagon’s 2009 original interpretation of Thelonious Monk’s 1959 Town Hall performance.
In My Mind was filmed as part of Gary Hawkins' Intermediate Documentary Filmmaking Course at CDS in the spring of 2009. Director: Gary Hawkins
Producer: Emily LaDue
Director of Photography: Steve Milligan
Executive Producer: Tom Rankin Facebook page for "In My Mind": facebook.com/pages/In-My-Mind/376992849514
"In My Mind" (opening clip)
<p>"In My Mind" (opening clip) from Center for Documentary Studies on Vimeo.</p>
"In My Mind" (In My Mind clip)
<p>"In My Mind" (In My Mind clip) from Center for Documentary Studies on Vimeo.</p>
>via: http://vimeo.com/12286174
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Full Frame Documentary
Film Festival 2010:
In My Mind (Gary Hawkins)
by Arthur Ryel-Lindsey on April 10th, 2010 at 11:33 pm in Festivals, Film
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In 2009, jazz piano prodigy Jason Moran and a vital group of musicians put a modernized twist on Thelonious Monk's legendary Town Hall concert, live in the same venue in New York. Director Gary Hawkins, with the assistance of the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, has cut together pristine footage from that epic jazz event with, among other things, photos and mixed-media interpretations of photographer Eugene Smith's tapes of Monk in rehearsal in an apartment known to insiders as the jazz loft. Though the music and Monks's legacy is ever at the heart of this masterpiece of music documentary craft, to call the result a concert film is too simplistic: The individual musicians' reactions to and analysis of Moran's direction blend into long, detailed, unrelenting montages of the musical numbers in creation, letting the true depth of Monks's music hammer home without impediment. And once you've listened to enough Monk, music never sounds the same.
In no uncertain terms, this is exactly the film jazz lovers needed to make (first because it may go a short way toward rectifying the nearly 50-year-old bad blood stirred up by another music documentary, Jazz on a Summer's Day, that turned its only Monk solo into background noise for America's Cup news coverage). The detail through which Hawkins, producer and co-editor Emily LaDue, and the rest of the creative team work in stories such as Monk's origins in rural North Carolina or the nature of his voice in the context of race or slavery provides a vital document of jazz as a combined cultural heritage. With close-ups of hands at the drum kit and piano keys and devoted understanding of jazz as a spontaneous, fluid, effervescent art, the film invites comparisons to the top-tier music documentaries. It sets a new standard for jazz on film along the way. Every student of music, Monk's or otherwise, should see this picture.