INTERVIEW: Rebecca Walker’s ‘Black Cool’ Promotes the Non-Material Side of Black Culture > The Daily Beast

Rebecca Walker’s

‘Black Cool’ 

 Promotes

the Non-Material Side

of Black Culture



Allison Samuels
Feb 4, 2012 

 

Inspired by an image of Obama, author Rebecca Walker collected ideas from African American authors on the positives of black culture that have nothing to do with material things.

 From the moment she spotted it in 2008, author Rebecca Walker couldn’t erase a particularly striking image of then soon-to-be President Barack Obama out her of mind.  For Walker, the picture of the 44th president of the United States emerging from a sleek black Town Car cloaked in a suave black suit, red tie, and super stylish sunglasses signified a return to an era of black cool she thought had died with the likes of Jimi Hendrix and Miles Davis. She was so impressed with the message conveyed by that particular photograph that she decided a book dedicated to all things black and cool was in order.

“I wanted to look at our culture and discuss what is cool about it that isn’t based on material things,’’ says Walker. “So much recently has connected coolness in the black community with the shoes you wear or the car you drive. That picture of Obama said very clearly that cool is your moral center, your way of thinking and the way you handle the issues you face in life.’’

Though Walker is frequently credited with being one of the founders of third-wave feminism, a movement that redefined women and girls as assertive, powerful, and in control of their own sexuality, she’s also used her voice to lead discussions on subjects such as multiracial identity, race relations, and motherhood.

In a passage from the forthcoming Black Cool: One Thousand Streams of Blackness, Walker writes, “Barack Obama emerges from the metal of a shiny black car as the Mende would emerge from a bath: fresh, new. No longer a boy with big ears, he steps out a prince. His audacity is astounding. His reserve is mesmerizing. His swagger undeniable.”

From her quiet home in Hawaii, Walker invited an impressive array of African-American writers such as bell hooks, Michaela Angela Davis, Margo Jefferson, and Henry Louis Gates to add their unique definition of what exactly constitutes authentic “black cool.” From the book’s 184 pages, it’s clear that authors like Davis relish the idea of discussing a subject that is completely untouchable by the mainstream but also currently in need of massive revisualization and reinvention from its current generation. Davis earnestly asks readers, “How will anyone learn or remember the genius of ‘black cool’ if black folks themselves don’t relentlessly interject interesting, innovative, incredible images into the collective cultural imagination?”

Rebecca Walker

Author, Rebecca Walker., Graham Jepson, TSPL / Camera Press / Retna

“I definitely thought a great deal about our younger generation when putting this book together,’’ said Walker, the mother of a 7-year-old son named Tenzin. “There are so many ways of receiving information today for young people, but I wanted them to have a book to read. Something they could hold in their hands and turn the pages, because there is something very real about that. So much of the information young people receive today is misleading about who they are. I watch television and see reality shows like Love and Hip Hop, and I just get really frustrated at what our children must be absorbing from that kind of show.’’

While contributing writers like dream hampton add color and spice to the book’s lyrical flow, it is indeed Walker’s elaborate details of her own powerful and painful childhood with her mother, acclaimed novelist Alice Walker, that captivates and illustrates the most about the title subject “black cool.” 

In stirring prose, she describes a bath ritual she and her mother regularly enjoyed at the end of their day: “While my mother or I soaked, the other would sit on the floor alongside the tub and tell the news of the day. My mother and I entered the space of cleansing waters and emerged renewed and radiant.’’ Walker also describes the seat or potential throne her mother left in every room, “waiting for a visitor, human or spirit, whatever shape or form.’’ 

‘It’s difficult but I don’t speak with my mother now. That doesn’t negate the happy and powerful memories that have stayed with me.’

The force of Walker’s loving memories and soulful words makes it nearly possible to forget that she and her mother haven’t spoken to one another in years. Mother and daughter ended dialogue several years ago, a public rift Walker attributes to not one but many issues.

“I have many, many great memories of growing up with my mother,’’ says Walker. “The bath ritual is one that I think about often because it was a wonderful way to connect and bond with her, recounting the events of the day. We had a visible split that everyone saw. It was over issues that many daughters have with their mothers, but ours were magnified by the press. It’s difficult but I don’t speak with my mother now. That doesn’t negate the happy and powerful memories that have stayed with me.’’

Though Walker says she adores her picturesque home in Hawaii, she is considering returning to a world filled with more people. The islands enticed the writer with their lush greenery, beautiful waters, and of course, their connection to black cool and Barack Obama.

“All that played a part in my decision to move here,’’ remembers Walker. “But now it’s feeling a bit too isolated and secluded for me. I miss the hustle and bustle of New York when I fly in to speak or for meetings. I miss the exchange of ideas and conversation. I want my son to feel that, too, so changes may be coming soon.’’

 

 

2 responses
Yeah, we real cool...as Gwen Brooks told us and Superfly showed us...but what is not cool is your disconnection with your mother. yeah I said it. what is not cool is that you care what the public thinks of your relationship with your mother.
what is not cool is that you sit in spiritual & physical seclusion from your mother with your son...who's name must mean...."I don't know my grandmother" selfishly beside you. I may be wrong and hopefully I am in that your grandson is connected with his g'ma. What a wonderful g'ma he has...its not cool if he doesn't even know her.
I am also a mother & nana and while me and my daughter have some very serious issues, as my only daughter their is no way I will ever allow them to keep us on non-speaking terms. Sure we shut down and cool off from time to time. But to keep it up so long that I'd share it with the world....no way. We as woman and sisters, must learn humility and respect...for one another...not just ourselves...THAT'S WHAT'S COOL!
Your mother is responsible for more than cleaning your behind in a tub. Through her you have everything ms. sista who is now an so called scholar on what's cool???? ...what IS NOT cool is your "not speaking" with your mama!
So write a book about that...for what it's worth.
I have that Obama image hanging on the back of my bedroom door. (Yes, I am single!) Our president is indeed the ultimate in cool. I especially enjoy being a spectator of the way he loves his wife. He is very deliberate, and very passionate about her. How cool is that? The image--and its placement--remind me that I'm covered. I can dream, hope and work towards the reality that I want--as a spiritual being, as a citizen, as a woman--and I'm covered. Way cool.

Kudos to you, Ms. Walker. But, I agree with the previous post: What is not cool is your rift from your mother. If you have not done so (and even if you have tried), it is on you to reach out to your mother. Humble yourself. My mother and I had a very difficult road together--drugs, various men, self-inflicted pain, physical illness--all on her part. Childhood was bad and I never let her forget it. Then I became a mom, saw how difficult life was in that role without resources, and become more understanding and humble.

I lost my mom to heart disease this past July. But not before we were able to reconcile and build a love together--complete with her grandchildren. We worked hard and God waved His hand over the thing. I am eternally grateful.

Honor your mother. That would be cool.

Marlene