African American Writers & Classical Tradition is the most exciting work of of literary criticism to emerge in decades. Indeed, it lays the groundwork for an entirely new field of study. Rarely can it be said that the reading of literary criticism is a joyful process, yet with this book, William W. Cook and James Tatum (pictured above, right to left), have produced just that. Written with great humor, at times tremendous passion, the reader is swept into the excitement of surprise and new discovery, following the adventure unearthed in the vast resources of classical Latin and ancient Greek literature employed by African American poets, novelists, and political thinkers. Once familiar, canonized figures, such as Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, and Ralph Ellison, are illuminated in fresh, often startling ways. Neglected masters, Melvin B. Tolson, and George S. Schulyer, are revived, given new life, and shown to have vital relevance to today’s times, cutting to the very core of the most contentious and controversial issues in America. Relatively obscure artists, such as Fran Ross, author of Oreo, are given their proper place alongside the aforementioned giants, and the greatness of poet Rita Dove is affirmed in the brilliant concluding chapter. There is a tremendous sense of momentum in the pages of this book, a momentum propelled by the lifelong friendship of its authors, Cook & Tatum. Their shared wisdom, wit, and delight in the task of bringing this complex and subtle story to us, one so uniquely American, is felt throughout the work. African American Writers & Classical Tradition, presents a new, and much needed, image of American literature, indeed, of American history. One that is vivid, compelling, and crackling with the electricity of folklore and mythology rooted to ancient sources, in both Africa and Europe, giving light to the present moment, our times.
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
African American Writers & Classical Tradition, Winner of the American Book Award 2011
African American Writers & Classical Tradition is the most exciting work of of literary criticism to emerge in decades. Indeed, it lays the groundwork for an entirely new field of study. Rarely can it be said that the reading of literary criticism is a joyful process, yet with this book, William W. Cook and James Tatum (pictured above, right to left), have produced just that. Written with great humor, at times tremendous passion, the reader is swept into the excitement of surprise and new discovery, following the adventure unearthed in the vast resources of classical Latin and ancient Greek literature employed by African American poets, novelists, and political thinkers. Once familiar, canonized figures, such as Frederick Douglass, W.E.B. DuBois, and Ralph Ellison, are illuminated in fresh, often startling ways. Neglected masters, Melvin B. Tolson, and George S. Schulyer, are revived, given new life, and shown to have vital relevance to today’s times, cutting to the very core of the most contentious and controversial issues in America. Relatively obscure artists, such as Fran Ross, author of Oreo, are given their proper place alongside the aforementioned giants, and the greatness of poet Rita Dove is affirmed in the brilliant concluding chapter. There is a tremendous sense of momentum in the pages of this book, a momentum propelled by the lifelong friendship of its authors, Cook & Tatum. Their shared wisdom, wit, and delight in the task of bringing this complex and subtle story to us, one so uniquely American, is felt throughout the work. African American Writers & Classical Tradition, presents a new, and much needed, image of American literature, indeed, of American history. One that is vivid, compelling, and crackling with the electricity of folklore and mythology rooted to ancient sources, in both Africa and Europe, giving light to the present moment, our times.
Monday, September 12, 2011
We Kiss In A Shadow

Happy Birthday to Sonny Rollins, pictured above, born Sept. 7th
Show description for Sunday 9/11/2011 @ 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM
"Always bear in mind that people are not fighting for ideas, for the things in anyone's head. They are fighting to win material benefits, to live better and in peace, to see their lives go forward, to guarantee the future of their children." - Amilcar Cabral, (September 12, 1924 – January 20, 1973)
". . . the hottest places in hell are reserved for those, who in a period of moral crisis, maintain their neutrality. There comes a time when silence is betrayal." Martin Luther King, Jr., April 4, 1967, "Why I Oppose the War In Vietnam"
Photograph, at right, by Seydou Keïta
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Bill Evans Trio | Witchcraft | Portrait In Jazz | Riverside | ||
George Russell | Nardis | Ezz-thetics | Riverside | ||
Eric Dolphy | 17 West | Out There | New Jazz | ||
Sarah Vaughn | I'm Glad There Is You | Sarah Vaughn | Emarcy | ||
Sarah Vaughn | Summertime | Afterhours | Columbia | ||
Billie Holiday | Summertime | The Quintessential | Columbia | ||
Billie Holiday | A Sailboat in the Moonlight | The Quintessential | Columbia | ||
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Sonny Rollins | There Is No Greater Love | Way Out West | Contemporary | ||
Sonny Rollins | A Night In Tunisia | More From The Vanguard | Blue Note | ||
Thelonious Monk Trio | Bye-Ya | Thelonious Monk Trio | Prestige | ||
Thelonious Monk | Work | Thelonious Monk & Sonny Rollins | Prestige | ||
Hank Mobley | 52nd Street Theme | Mobley's Message | Prestige | ||
========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
Hank Mobley | Message From The Border | Mobley's Second Message | Prestige | ||
Ella Fitzgerald | Bewitched | Rodgers & Hart Songbook | Verve | ||
Ella Fitzgerald | Love Is Here To Stay | Gershwin Songbook | Verve | ||
Ella Fitzgerald | I Didn't Know About You | Ellington Songbook | Verve | ||
Eric Dolphy & Booker Little | Miss Ann | Far Cry | New Jazz | ||
Ron Carter | Rally | Where? | New Jazz | ||
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Ted Joans (read by Justin Desmangles) | Passed On Blues: Homage to a Poet | Teducation | Coffee House | ||
Eric Dolphy & Booker Little | Status Seeking | Status | Prestige | ||
Mal Waldron | Don't Explain | Mal 2 | Prestige | ||
Mal Waldron | Dee's Dilemma | Mal 1 | Prestige | ||
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Sonny Rollins | Strode Rode | Saxophone Colossus | Prestige | ||
Thelonious Monk | Brilliant Corners | Brilliant Corners | Riverside | ||
Sonny Rollins | We Kiss In A Shadow | East Broadway Rundown | Impulse | ||
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Ornette Coleman | The Garden Of Souls | New York Is Now! | Blue Note | ||
Ornette Coleman | We Now Interrupt For A Commerical |
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Solar Throat Slashed: Part Two with Clayton Eshleman

Show description for Sunday 8/28/2011 @ 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM
Our guest today on the 5 o'clock hour, Clayton Eshleman (pictured at right), discussing his most recent work, in collaboration with A. James Arnold, Solar Throat Slashed, the unexpurgated 1948 edition of the masterwork by Aimé Césaire.
Soleil cou coupé (Solar Throat Slashed) is Aimé Césaire’s most explosive collection of poetry. Animistically dense, charged with eroticism and blasphemy, and imbued with an African and Vodun spirituality, this book takes the French surrealist adventure to new heights and depths. A Césaire poem is an intersection at which metaphoric traceries create historically aware nexuses of thought and experience, jagged solidarity, apocalyptic surgery, and solar dynamite. The original 1948 French edition of Soleil cou coupé has a dense magico-religious frame of reference. In the late 1950s, Césaire was increasingly politically focused and seeking a wider audience, when he, in effect, gelded the 1948 text—eliminating 31 of the 72 poems, and editing another 29. Until now, only the revised 1961 edition, called Cadastre, has been translated. The revised text lacks the radical originality of Soleil cou coupé. This Wesleyan edition presents all the original poems en face with the new English translations. Includes an introduction by A. James Arnold and notes by Clayton Eshleman.
“Not only do Eshleman and Arnold give us excellent translations of Césaire’s at times syntactically knotty, etymologically abstruse, and semantically bedeviling verse; they also contextualize the poems—with an introduction by Arnold and endnotes by Eshleman—with crucial historical information and lucid discussions of the complexities of the poems’ language.”—Brent Hayes Edwards, author of The Practice of Diaspora
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| Artist | Song | Album | Label |
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---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charles Mingus Quartet | What Love? | Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus | Candid |
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| Mahmood Jamal | A Gift of Blood | An Evening of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Mahmood Jamal | Silence | An Evening of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Bud Powell | Blue Pearl | Bud!: The Amazing Bud Powell Volume 3 | Blue Note |
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| Bud Powell | John's Abbey | Time Waits | Blue Note |
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| Mushtaq Singh | The Respite | An Evening of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Mushtaq Singh | 4 Lines in Urdu Translation | An Evening of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Lee Morgan | All At Once, You Love Her | Candy | Blue Note |
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| Bill Evans | Tenderly | Everybody Digs Bill Evans | Riverside |
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| Carmen McRae | How Did He Look? | Bittersweet | Focus |
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| Carmen McRae | Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out To Dry | Bittersweet | Focus |
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| Carmen McRae | The Meaning of the Blues | Bittersweet | Focus |
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| Thad Jones | Something To Remember You By | The Magnificnet Thad Jones | Blue Note |
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| Accabre Huntley | Easter Monday Blues | An Evening of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Paul Chambers | Untitled (Bebop Blues) | Bass On Top | Blue Note - Japan |
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| Billie Holiday | A Fine Romance | All or Nothing All | Verve |
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| Billie Holiday | Cheek to Cheek | All or Nothing All | Verve |
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| Charles Mingus | Bugs | Complete Candid Recordings | Mosaic |
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| Cecil Rajendra | The Animal & Insects Act | An Evening of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Gil Evans Orchestra | Stratusphunk | Out of the Cool | Impulse |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Beverly Kenney | A Woman's Intuition | Sings For Playboys | Decca |
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| Beverly Kenney | You're My Boy | Sings For Playboys | Decca |
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| Beverly Kenney | What Is Thre To Say | Sings For Playboys | Decca |
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| Bill Evans | What Is Thre To Say? | Everybody Digs Bill Evans | Riverside |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Bill Evans | April In Paris (excerpt) | Solo Sessions | Milestone |
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| Interview with Clayton Eshleman by Justin Desmangles | Interview with Clayton Eshleman by Justin Desmangles | Interview with Clayton Eshleman by Justin Desmangles | Interview with Clayton Eshleman by Justin Desmangles |
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| Bill Evans | April In Paris (excerpt) | Solo Sessions | Milestone |
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Aime Cesaire: Solar Throat Slashed, Part One with A. James Arnold

Show description for Sunday 8/21/2011 @ 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM
A. JAMES ARNOLD is an emeritus professor of French at the University of Virginia. He is the lead editor of Césaire's complete literary works in French (in progress) and author of Modernism and Negritude: The Poetry and Poetics of Aimé Césaire.
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Soleil cou coupé (Solar Throat Slashed) is Aimé Césaire’s most explosive collection of poetry. Animistically dense, charged with eroticism and blasphemy, and imbued with an African and Vodun spirituality, this book takes the French surrealist adventure to new heights and depths. A Césaire poem is an intersection at which metaphoric traceries create historically aware nexuses of thought and experience, jagged solidarity, apocalyptic surgery, and solar dynamite. The original 1948 French edition of Soleil cou coupé has a dense magico-religious frame of reference. In the late 1950s, Césaire was increasingly politically focused and seeking a wider audience, when he, in effect, gelded the 1948 text—eliminating 31 of the 72 poems, and editing another 29. Until now, only the revised 1961 edition, called Cadastre, has been translated. The revised text lacks the radical originality of Soleil cou coupé. This Wesleyan edition presents all the original poems en face with the new English translations. Includes an introduction by A. James Arnold and notes by Clayton Eshleman.
“Not only do Eshleman and Arnold give us excellent translations of Césaire’s at times syntactically knotty, etymologically abstruse, and semantically bedeviling verse; they also contextualize the poems—with an introduction by Arnold and endnotes by Eshleman—with crucial historical information and lucid discussions of the complexities of the poems’ language.”—Brent Hayes Edwards, author of The Practice of Diaspora
“Since Césaire first came into our view, he has seemed to some of us to be, with Breton and Artaud, one of the three truly unbounded poets of Surrealism—not so much lyrical, as with some other, more readily accessible poets (Eluard and Desnos the finest among them), but as Diderot had it over two centuries ago: the maker of a poetry that was and had to be ‘barbaric, vast and wild.’ It is the genius of the present gathering to rescue from previous editings and literary compromises the full force of Césaire’s remarkable 1948 work, Soleil cou coupé/Solar Throat Slashed. The result—in both the original French and in Eshleman’s and Arnold’s remarkable and no-holds-barred translation—is a reconstituted masterwork of the twentieth century and ample grist for the century to come.”—Jerome Rothenberg, editor of Technicians of the Sacred
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| Artist | Song | Album | Label |
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| William Parker featuring Leena Conquest | If There's A Hell Below | I Plan To Stay A Believer | AUM - Fidelity |
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| William Parker Organ Quartet | The Struggle | Uncle Joe's Spirit House | Centering Music |
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| Wasimxzama Khan Naseri | Kavali | Music In the World of Islam: Voices | Topic Records |
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| Dunya Yunis | Abu Zeluf | Music In the World of Islam: Voices | Topic Records |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Henry Threadgill Zooid | Extremely Sweet William | This Brings Us To, Vol. 2 | Pi |
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| Henry Threadgill Zooid | Polymorph | This Brings Us To, Vol. 2 | Pi |
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| Henry Grimes & Rashied Ali | Rapid Transit | Spirits Aloft | Porter |
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| Michael Bisio | Travel Music | Travel Music | michaelbisio.com |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Louie Belogenis Trio | Tiresias | Tiresias | Porter |
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| Henry Threadgill Zooid | White Wednesday Off the Wall | This Brings Us To, Vol. 1 | Pi |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Farmers By Nature | Out of This World's Distortions Grow Aspens and Other Beautiful Things | Out of This World's Distortions | AUM - Fidelity |
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| Interview with A. James Arnold by Justin Desmangles | Interview with A. James Arnold by Justin Desmangles | Interview with A. James Arnold by Justin Desmangles | Interview with A. James Arnold by Justin Desmangles |
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| Farmers By Nature | Out of This World's Distortions Grow Aspens and Other Beautiful Things | Out of This World's Distortions | AUM - Fidelity |
Sunday, August 21, 2011
10 Years That Shook The City
Show description for Sunday 8/14/2011 @ 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM
Our guest this afternoon on the 5 o'clock hour, Chris Carlsson, author, activist and most recently editor of the newly published collection of essays Ten Years That Shook the City
A collection of first-person and historical essays spans the tumultuous decade from 1968, the year of the San Francisco State College strike, to 1978 and the twin traumas of the Jonestown massacre and the assassinations of Mayor George Moscone and Supervisor Harvey Milk. This volume provides a broad look at the diverse ways those ten years shook the City and shaped the world we live in today. From community gardening to environmental justice, gay rights and other identity-based social movements, anti-gentrification efforts, neighborhood arts programs and more, many of the initiatives whose origins are described here have taken root and spread far beyond San Francisco.
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| Michael Smith | Say Natty / Goliath | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Mushtaq Singh | The Respite / 4 Lines In Urdu Translation | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Art Ensemble Of Chicago | Ja (Bowie) | Nice Guys | ECM |
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| Art Ensemble Of Chicago | Cyp (Mitchell) | Nice Guys | ECM |
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| Mahmood Jamal | A Gift Of Blood | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Mahmood Jamal | Silence | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Accabre Huntley | Easter Monday Blues | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Joseph Jarman - Don Moye | Ode To Wilbur Ware (Moye) | Black Palladins | Black Saint |
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| Jim Agard | Stereotype | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Jim Agard | Graffiti In A British Rail Waiting Room | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Chico Freeman | Ascent (Freeman) | The Outside Within | India Navigation |
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| Cecil Rajendra | The Animal And Insects Act | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Linton Kwesi Johnson | Di Great Insohrekshan | An Evening Of International Poetry | Alliance Records |
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| Joe Henderson | Serenity (Henderson) | An Evening With Joe Henderson | Red |
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| Bennie Green | Soul Stirrin' (Green) | Soul Stirrin' | Blue Note - Japan |
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| Ernie Henry | Cleo's Chant (Henry) | Presenting Ernie Henry | Riverside - Japan |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Claude McKay | Introduction To If We Must Die | Anthology Of Negro Poets | Folkways |
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| Claude McKay | If We Must Die | Anthology Of Negro Poets | Folkways |
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| Bobby Hutcherson | Ghetto Lights (Hill) | Dialogue | Blue Note |
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| Charles Mingus | Moanin' (Mingus) | Blues & Roots | Atlantic |
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| Calvin C. Hernton | Jitterbugging In The Streets | New Jazz Poets | Broadside Records |
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| Kenny Dorham featuring Ernie Henry | Is It True What They Say About Dixie? | 2 Horns 2 Rhythm | Riverside |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Jackie McLean | Parker's Mood (Parker) excerpt | Live At Montmartre | Steeple Chase |
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| Interview With Chris Carlsson By Justin Desmangles | Interview With Chris Carlsson By Justin Desmangles | Interview With Chris Carlsson By Justin Desmangles | Interview With Chris Carlsson By Justin Desmangles |
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| Jackie McLean | Parker's Mood (Parker) excerpt | Live At Montmartre | Steeple Chase |
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| Charlie Parker - Dizzy Gillespie | Shaw 'Nuff (Parker-Gillespie) | Bebop | New World Records |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Bud Powell - Oscar Pettiford - Kenny Clarke | Shaw 'Nuff (Parker-Gillespie) | i grandi del Jazz Bud Powell | Fabri Editori |
Thursday, August 11, 2011
An Open Statement to the Fans of The Help: On behalf of the Association of Black Women Historians
An Open Statement to the Fans of The Help:
On behalf of the Association of Black Women Historians (ABWH), this statement provides historical context to address widespread stereotyping presented in both the film and novel version of The Help. The book has sold over three million copies, and heavy promotion of the movie will ensure its success at the box office. Despite efforts to market the book and the film as a progressive story of triumph over racial injustice, The Help distorts, ignores, and trivializes the experiences of black domestic workers. We are specifically concerned about the representations of black life and the lack of attention given to sexual harassment and civil rights activism.
During the 1960s, the era covered in The Help, legal segregation and economic inequalities limited black women's employment opportunities. Up to 90 per cent of working black women in the South labored as domestic servants in white homes. The Help’s representation of these women is a disappointing resurrection of Mammy—a mythical stereotype of black women who were compelled, either by slavery or segregation, to serve white families. Portrayed as asexual, loyal, and contented caretakers of whites, the caricature of Mammy allowed mainstream America to ignore the systemic racism that bound black women to back-breaking, low paying jobs where employers routinely exploited them. The popularity of this most recent iteration is troubling because it reveals a contemporary nostalgia for the days when a black woman could only hope to clean the White House rather than reside in it.
Both versions of The Help also misrepresent African American speech and culture. Set in the South, the appropriate regional accent gives way to a child-like, over-exaggerated “black” dialect. In the film, for example, the primary character, Aibileen, reassures a young white child that, “You is smat, you is kind, you is important.” In the book, black women refer to the Lord as the “Law,” an irreverent depiction of black vernacular. For centuries, black women and men have drawn strength from their community institutions. The black family, in particular provided support and the validation of personhood necessary to stand against adversity. We do not recognize the black community described in The Help where most of the black male characters are depicted as drunkards, abusive, or absent. Such distorted images are misleading and do not represent the historical realities of black masculinity and manhood.
Furthermore, African American domestic workers often suffered sexual harassment as well as physical and verbal abuse in the homes of white employers. For example, a recently discovered letter written by Civil Rights activist Rosa Parks indicates that she, like many black domestic workers, lived under the threat and sometimes reality of sexual assault. The film, on the other hand, makes light of black women’s fears and vulnerabilities turning them into moments of comic relief.
Similarly, the film is woefully silent on the rich and vibrant history of black Civil Rights activists in Mississippi. Granted, the assassination of Medgar Evers, the first Mississippi based field secretary of the NAACP, gets some attention. However, Evers’ assassination sends Jackson’s black community frantically scurrying into the streets in utter chaos and disorganized confusion—a far cry from the courage demonstrated by the black men and women who continued his fight. Portraying the most dangerous racists in 1960s Mississippi as a group of attractive, well dressed, society women, while ignoring the reign of terror perpetuated by the Ku Klux Klan and the White Citizens Council, limits racial injustice to individual acts of meanness.
We respect the stellar performances of the African American actresses in this film. Indeed, this statement is in no way a criticism of their talent. It is, however, an attempt to provide context for this popular rendition of black life in the Jim Crow South. In the end, The Help is not a story about the millions of hardworking and dignified black women who labored in white homes to support their families and communities. Rather, it is the coming-of-age story of a white protagonist, who uses myths about the lives of black women to make sense of her own. The Association of Black Women Historians finds it unacceptable for either this book or this film to strip black women’s lives of historical accuracy for the sake of entertainment.
Ida E. Jones is National Director of ABWH and Assistant Curator at Howard University. Daina Ramey Berry, Tiffany M. Gill, and Kali Nicole Gross are Lifetime Members of ABWH and Associate Professors at the University of Texas at Austin. Janice Sumler-Edmond is a Lifetime Member of ABWH and is a Professor at Huston-Tillotson University.
Word Count: 766
Suggested Reading:
Fiction:
Like one of the Family: Conversations from A Domestic’s Life, Alice Childress
The Book of the Night Women by Marlon James
Blanche on the Lam by Barbara Neeley
The Street by Ann Petry
A Million Nightingales by Susan Straight
Non-Fiction:
Out of the House of Bondage: The Transformation of the Plantation Household by Thavolia Glymph
To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Women’s Lives and Labors by Tera Hunter
Labor of Love Labor of Sorrow: Black Women, Work, and the Family, from Slavery to the Present by Jacqueline Jones
Living In, Living Out: African American Domestics and the Great Migration by Elizabeth Clark-Lewis
Coming of Age in Mississippi by Anne Moody
Any questions, comments, or interview requests can be sent to: ABWHTheHelp@gmail.com
ABWH Statement The Help (pdf)
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
To Undertake My Corners Open

Show description for Sunday 8/7/2011 @ 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM
Now to talk to me about black studies as if it's something that concerned [only] black people is an utter denial. This is the history of Western Civilization. I can't see it otherwise. This is the history that black people and white people and all serious students of modern history of the world have to know. To say it's some kind of ethnic problem is a lot of nonsense. - C.L.R. James, (1969)
Where the string
At
some point,
Was umbilical jazz,
Or perhaps,
In memory,
A long lost bloody cross,
Buried in some steel cavalry.
In what time
For whom do we bleed,
Lost notes, from some jazzman's
Broken needle.
Musical tears from lost
Eyes.
Broken drumsticks, why?
Pitter patter, boom dropping
Bombs in the middle
Of my emotions
My father's sound
My mother's sound,
Is love,
Is life
pictured at right, Yves Tanguy, Dame a l'Absence, 1942
pictured above, Henry Treadgill, photo by Claudio Casanova
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| Artist | Song | Album | Label |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Henry Grimes & Rashied Ali | This Must Have Always Happened | Going to the Ritual | Porter |
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| Odean Pope | Scorpio Twins | Plant Life | Porter |
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| Wordwind Chorus (Q.R.Hand) | The Rap From Living On Dreams | We Are of the Saying | Wordwind Chorus |
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| Michael Bisio | Zephyr Revisited | Travel Music | michaelbisio.com |
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| Henry Threadgill Zooid | After Some Time | This Brings Us To (Volume 1) | Pi |
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| Al Young | Sundays In Democracies | Something About the Blues | Sourcebooks |
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| Henry Threadgill Zooid | Lying Eyes | This Brings Us To (Volume 2) | Pi |
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| Farmers By Nature | Sir Snacktray Speaks | Out of This Worlds Distortions | AUM-Fidelity |
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| Wordwind Chorus (Reginald Lockett) | A Veteran Contemplates the Fate of His Immigrant Students | We Are of the Saying | Wordwind Chorus |
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| Darius Jones & Matthew Shipp | Bleed | Cosmic Lieder | AUM-Fidelity |
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| Darius Jones & Matthew Shipp | Ultima Thule | Cosmic Lieder | AUM-Fidelity |
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| Al Young | Conjugal Visits | Something About the Blues | Sourcebooks |
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| Michael Bisio | Livin' Large | Travel Music | michaelbisio.com |
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| Henry Threadgill Zooid | To Undertake My Corners Open | This Brings Us To (Volume 1) | Pi |
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| David S. Ware | Duality Is One | Planetary Unknown | AUM-Fidelity |
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| Farmers By Nature | Out Of This World's Distortions Grow Aspens and Other Beautiful Things | Out of This World's Distortions | AUM-Fidelity |
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========================== Airbreak ========================== | |||||
| Henry Threadgill Zooid | It Never Moved | This Brings Us To (Volume 2) | Pi |
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| Wordwind Chorus (Reginald Lockett) | The Movement | We Are of the Saying | Wordwind Chorus |
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| Odean Pope featuring Marshall Allen | Custody of the American Spirit | Universal Sounds | Porter |
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| Henry Threadgill Zooid | Extremely Sweet William | This Brings Us To (Volume 2) | Pi |
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| Corey Wilkes & Abstrakt Pulse | Levitation | Cries From Tha Ghetto | Pi |
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| Marc Ribot | Spirits | Spiritual Unity | Pi |
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| Ran Blake & Jeanne Lee | Newswatch | You Stepped Out of a Cloud | Owl |
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| Art Ensemble of Chicago | Everyday's a Perfect Day | [Sirius Calling] | Pi |