Friday, July 31, 2009

The Legacy of Reverend "Ike"



Remembering the Legacy of America’s “Green Preacher,” Rev. Ike
By Jonathan L. Walton

Rev. Frederick J. Eikerenkoetter II was a controversial and complicated personality who cast his ecclesial wings upon the religious airwaves to become a pop-culture icon. More commonly known as “Rev. Ike,” he was a religious innovator and architect of one of the more prominent religious movements of the contemporary moment. At a time when few African Americans were on television, religious or otherwise, Rev. Ike used advanced technologies to take his message of God-ordained financial prosperity from a Harlem storefront to mainstream society. As a result, he helped to reconfigure the religious and racial boundaries that once defined the perceived center and margins of American spiritual life.

When I interviewed him a few years ago, however, he seemed less than sanguine about his legacy. In most circles, the very mention of his name evokes either a dismissive chuckle or a demonstrative condemnation. Adjectives like charlatan, huckster, or crook are quite common in describing the former prayer-cloth peddler. And in comedic culture he will forever be linked to Richard Pryor’s character “Daddy Rich” in Car Wash or Reverend Sam, the Elmer Gantry-like televangelist from Norman Lear’s classic sitcom Good Times.

This is even true among contemporary evangelists who now drink from the theological and ministerial wells that Rev. Ike helped to drill. Frederick Price, Creflo Dollar and Bishop T.D. Jakes are quick to distance themselves from Rev. Ike’s name, even as they unapologetically embrace his self-indulgent theology and lifestyle. In fact, most of today’s African American televangelists are much more willing to credit their success to prominent white evangelists such as Oral Roberts, Kenneth Hagin or Kenneth Copeland.

Read the Full Essay @ Religion Dispatches

***

Jonathan L. Walton is assistant professor of Religious Studies at the University of California, Riverside. He teaches courses in African American Religion; Religion, Media & Culture and Religion & Political Discourse. His new book is: Watch This! The Ethics and Aesthetics of Black Religious Broadcasting (New York University Press).


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Enough Already? More Commentary on "Gates-gate"



Beer and Sympathy
by Gary Younge

As I write, the beers are in the presidential fridge. After their drink, Gates will go back to Harvard, Crowley will return to the force, Obama will stay in the White House. Nothing about law or race, not even the national conversation, will have changed. And Troy Davis will remain on death row. For now the only beer he can expect will be with his last meal. And he will be drinking alone.

Read the Full Essay @ The Nation

Gary Younge, the Alfred Knobler Journalism Fellow at The Nation Institute, is the New York correspondent for the Guardian and the author of No Place Like Home: A Black Briton's Journey Through the Deep South (Mississippi) and Stranger in a Strange Land: Travels in the Disunited States (New Press).


***

Obama Flunks His "Teachable Moment"
by Mark Anthony Neal

The Gates arrest gave the president ample opportunity to stimulate a broad national discussion about police and community relations and the role of race and ethnicity when these relations become contentious. Such a conversation would have been a politically risky endeavor, no doubt. But discussion would have been far more valuable than a brewski photo-op, which is how the Gates case will likely be remembered.

Read the Full Essay @ theGRIO

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Tuesday, July 28, 2009

New Book: The Mississippi Delta Hip-Hop Story



Let the World Listen Right:
The Mississippi Delta Hip-Hop Story
by Ali Colleen Neff
Foreword by William R. Ferris

A study of grass roots musical creation happening in the cradle of the blues.

In the Mississippi Delta, creativity, community, and a rich expressive culture persist despite widespread poverty. Over five years of extensive work in the region, author Ali Colleen Neff collected a wealth of materials that demonstrate a vibrant musical scene.

Let the World Listen Right draws from classic studies of the blues as well as extensive ethnographic work to document the "changing same" of Delta music making. From the neighborhood juke joints of the contemporary Delta to the international hip-hop stage, this study traces the musical networks that join the region's African American communities to both traditional forms and new global styles.

The book features the words and describes performances of contemporary artists, including blues musicians, gospel singers, radio and club DJs, barroom toast-tellers, preachers, poets, and a spectrum of Delta hip-hop artists. Contemporary Delta hip-hop artists Jerome "TopNotch the Villain" Williams, Kimyata "Yata" Dear, and DA F.A.M. have contributed freestyle poetry, extensive interview materials, and their own commentaries. The book focuses particularly on the biography of TopNotch, whose hip-hop poetics emerge from a lifetime of schoolyard dozens and training in the gospel church.

***

Formerly a music writer for the San Francisco Bay Guardian, the SF Weekly, and the East Bay Express, among others, Ali Colleen Neff is currently an instructor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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E. Lynn Harris Goes Home



The gay black writer invented his life the way he invented characters and changed the face of black literature.

E. Lynn Harris: 1955-2009
by Teresa Wiltz

To read an E. Lynn Harris novel was to eavesdrop on the lives of the young, black and fabulous. The, young, black, conflicted and fabulous, that is: Harris made a name for himself chronicling the lives of the beautiful and the buff, men living on the down low, having lots of hot, tormented sex while wearing designer duds and generally living the glamorous life.

He’d be the first to tell you that he was no literary stylist, no turner of sweet phrases, but he knew how to tell tales, tales that people wanted to read. There’s a reason Harris, who died Friday of an apparent heart attack, was a 10-time New York Times best-seller; his writing struck a deep, resonant chord. He may have been a gay black man writing about other gay black men, but he also wrote about black women, straight black women, with sensitivity and often with glowing admiration. Sisters returned the favor, lining up in droves to buy his books, becoming his biggest fans.

Read the Full Essay @ The Root.com

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Bicycling While Black


special to NewBlackMan

Bicycling While Black
by Lawrence Jackson

When I was seventeen and the undercover policeman put a pistol to my head until I urinated on myself and accused me of stealing my father’s car, I was powerless to do anything.

When I was nineteen and the policeman detained me while I was walking to the bus stop for the regularly scheduled bus, I was powerless.

But as a forty-one-year-old Emory University professor I don’t have the excuse of powerlessness. And as the father of two Georgia-born sons I have the responsibility of making sure their native land does not persecute them on account of their gender and color.

This was what went through my mind one night in June at 10:50 p.m. when I was detained and fined by three Decatur City police officers in two patrol units (#1016 and #1017) for twenty-five minutes on brightly lit Clairemont Road across from the YMCA for… riding my bicycle without a light. My house, where I have lived for the last six years, was a mile-and-a-half away. Emory University, where I am tenured faculty member in two departments, was a mile away. I was across the street from the Y where my son plays soccer and T-Ball, next to the credit union where I bank.

Sunday night, I decided to ride my bicycle after three quarters of Laker dominance. But do I really need an excuse to go bike riding? Between downtown Decatur and Oakhurst village I had seen multiple police units several times, marked and unmarked. I was certainly happy to be on a bicycle where I felt some degree of immunity from them. I should have avoided the police at all cost, as I did the week before when I drove around a block in the Grant Park neighborhood to evade some stopped patrol car with blue lights. The police are professionally suspicious of black men—“Number One Males” in their lingo--and in Dekalb County they have a reputation for shooting unarmed black men.

When I was returning home on Clairemont, on my way to Desmond, as fast as I could pedal, a police patrol car with flashing lights sat parked in the right hand lane. Another patrol car without lights raced by me near the intersection of Scott Boulevard and stopped beside the first car. The Decatur police were now blocking both lanes of northbound traffic. From my vantage they seemed to be having a discussion with one another in a non-emergency situation.

I rode past the two units blocking the street. Both cars then began pursuing me and sounding different sirens and horns. Like most people who don’t believe they have broken any laws, I assumed that they had some useful purpose unconnected to me. But I was their target. After I stopped my bicycle I said to them that I couldn’t believe that they did not have more useful ways to spend their time. My Stanford roommate once was forced from his bicycle and taken to the station where they photographed his thighs. I was boiling. When I walked toward their car to give them a piece of my mind they reacted as if I meant them bodily harm and their useful police training took the entire situation to another level.

Personally, I can’t remember containing that level of fury. The eight thousand dollars in tax I paid to Georgia last year, squandered so relentlessly in “over-policing.” I’m still furious, as I was standing there in a spotlight, being monitored by a man in pre-shooting position with his hand on his gun, paces away from so that he could have enough room to unloose his weapon if I proved unmanageable. During the whole stretched out circus in the 2,000 watt spotlight and Mason’s blue light, as gawking drivers cruised past, I couldn’t stop thinking about the inevitably puzzled look my boss Jim Wagner would have if he happened to drive by with his family. “Is that Jackson, but he seemed responsible...”

I am awfully curious to know how many of my white neighbors have been detained and fined for breaking any bicycle operator’s code in Decatur that didn’t involve an accident. I am going to try to find out. I know it can’t have been many because it took three officers with computers more than fifteen minutes to locate code number 40-6-296 of the purported infringement that I had made. If that’s how Decatur’s police are keeping busy then the city and the county should spend their money more wisely.

Since my middle child was born in 2005 I have looked admiringly at City of Decatur schools and considered seriously trying to buy one of the expensive homes in “The Great Lakes” or Winona Park. Now I have a hard time thinking the sacrifice worth it.

***

Lawrence Jackson is Associate Professor of English and African American Studies and the author of Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius (Wiley 2002; Georgia 2007) and Renaissance of Indignation: A History of African American Writers and Critics, 1934-1960 (Princeton 2010). He can be contacted at lpjacks@emory.edu

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Monday, July 27, 2009

Around the Way Gurl




Around the Way Gurl
by Mark Anthony Neal

It started innocent enough; subway platform at the Dekalb Avenue station in Brooklyn, uptown bound BMT train. I was smitten at first sight. I was 16 and she was month or two from 15. We were both from the Bronx, grew up five minutes from each other. It was the spring of 1982 and whatever rhetorical gifts I possess now, they were unknown to me then. After a few days of staring, two of my boys—who both would serve as groomsmen nearly a decade later—urged me to at least ask her name. “Peaches?. what the hell kind of name is that” I recall another friend chiming in. Baby girl of the family, southern roots, the “light one”—as I would come to understand years later. Nevertheless, contact was made, however awkward. Then as in now, she set the agenda, I just followed. But springtime romances are just what they are: fast and fleeting. After a few months we both moved on.

It had been some time since I had seen or thought about her when she called out to me in the Village in the autumn of 1987. We were on Broadway, between 8th Street and Astor Place, right in front of the Benetton that used to be there. I had just graduated from college and she was in her third year at NYU. We exchanged numbers and I didn’t think too much about it, until she called weeks later at the urging of a co-worker. We did the requisite movie date—Barbara Streisand’s Nuts was the film, dinner was at the original "Dallas" BBQ restaurant on 8th street. My lasting memory of the date was her running out of my car when I brought home, though 22 years later, she still denies this.

There were more dates to follow—the Christmas eve date where I locked my keys in my car and had to race across Manhattan by foot to meet her in the basement of Macy’s by David's Cookies, only for my cashless ass (I used my cash pay the locksmith) to take her to dinner to a restaurant that didn’t take credit cards. By every right she should have stepped then, but there was something that kept her interested. I guess I was a good guy.

Within a year we were serious and got engaged on New Year’s Eve 1990 at Chinese Restaurant—now long gone—on 2nd avenue and 32nd Street. We were married in Harlem—on 155th street on the Westside. Her pastor officiated and sang “In the Garden” in a way that our southern parents appreciated more than anything. Still an aspiring poet I read original verse. My best man’s future bride and her singing partner sang Be Be and Ce Cen Winans’ “I’m Lost Without You.” Many remarked about how long I embraced her after we said “I Do.” We took wedding photos in front of Grant’s Tomb and marched into our reception at Columbia University’s International House to “Optimistic” by the Sound of Blackness. Our first dance was to Al Green’s “God Blessed Our Love.” And indeed, 18 years later we have been blessed.

Like any couple we struggle with day-to-day realities. There have been many challenges along the way. Sometimes in the midst of raising two demanding and brilliant little girls, the two of us get lost. Sometimes, she gets lost as my ambitions drive me in every direction, but home. But we always seem to find our grounding. Perhaps it’s the values that we share, two children of the South Bronx, whose working class parents held out in the hope that we would be the very overachievers that we’ve became. Between them, our parents put in more than 90 years of marriage and death was the only thing that stood in their way. There was no question that we were gonna survive.

The only thing I know now is that this woman has made me a better man—and I’ve become a good husband and an even better father. And yeah, I still won’t mop the floor without asking and there’s still that toilet seat thing, but that’s what the next 18 years are for.


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Thursday, July 23, 2009

Will Downing in 'Classique' Form



With more than 21 years in the business, Will Downing's new album, Classique, finds him only adding to his considerable allure.


Will Downing in 'Classique' Form
by Mark Anthony Neal

Classique, the title of Will Downing's new release, suggests yet another collection of "classic" soul and R&B recordings. And Downing does include several remarkable remakes, but what the recording's title really asserts is that Downing himself is in classic form throughout the album. With more than 21 years in the business, Downing is one of the most recognizable brands in
R&B and smooth jazz, and Classique finds him only adding to his considerable allure.

But three years ago, critics and fans were writing obituaries for Downing's career. He was diagnosed in late 2006 with a debilitating muscular disease, and there was much speculation that one of the most distinctive voices of the last two decades would be silenced. The artist recorded much of 2007's After Tonight in a wheelchair, while still recovering in the hospital. By the summer of 2008, Downing was back on the road. Talking by phone from New York City, he sounded healthy and strong, "I'm feeling pretty good," he told me. "God's been good."

Classique is a collection of mostly original tracks with longtime collaborator Rex Rideout. "We've been friends for 16 years," Downing says of Rideout, whose resume includes recordings with Lalah Hathaway, Mary J. Blige, Angie Stone and Maysa. Rideout has "helped shape me into the artist that you hear," said Downing, who has worked with the producer since 1993's Love's the Place to Be. Rideout contributes to the bouncy "More Time (Tic Toc)" and the lead single, "Something Special," which was co-written with Downing and fellow singer-songwriter Gary Taylor. Additionally, Downing takes the production reins himself on several tracks, including "Let's Make It Now" and "I Won't Stop," the kind of mid-tempo balladry that Downing has built his career on.

Read the Full Essay @ The Root.com

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Lifestyles of the Rich and Shameless...


special to NewBlackMan

Lifestyles of the Rich and Shameless…
by Wilfredo Gomez

Lifestyles of the Rich and Shameless/Some die with a name, some die nameless…its all the same Pain
--Lost Boyz “Lifestyles of the Rich and Shameless”
It all started with a message on facebook received at 1:34 a.m. on Tuesday, July 21, 2009. The message came from a friend and dear colleague, Rudy Aguilar, a doctoral candidate in American Studies at the University of Minnesota. The message sent with a hint of urgency simply read: “Yo yo did you hear the news?” He proceeded to inform me of the arrest of Henry Louis Gates. I had heard about the news earlier via the social networking site facebook. Had it not been for the site, I may not have heard about the news until reading the New York Times. The fact that I could be informed via facebook is telling on a number of levels. I am of that generation of students whose formative college experience as an undergraduate was had with the advent of facebook. At that time facebook was still exclusive to college students and seen as more “sophisticated” version of other social networking sites such as Myspace. As such, were it not for the activists, intellectuals, and students that are “in the know” I may not have known of Gates’ arrest.

As the conversation proceeded my friend sent me a link to the Boston Globe’s story highlighting the details of the arrest. He pointed out that the comments in response to the piece were an indication of the “quotidian racism” that passes in America. While some comments were arguing for a more nuanced critical eye, others settled on flat out ignorance. To this I pondered, what is the real and imagined significance and impact of such an experience as it relates to the broader spectrum of incidents regarding the treatment of marginalized and oftentimes silenced communities across America. Allow me to explain.

In the confidence of my friendship I shared that I had been staying with some friends on the Main Line of the Philadelphia suburbs. On three separate occasions within a week and a half I had been stopped by Lower Merion police where I encountered a barrage of questions: “What are you doing here/?” “Where do you belong?” Can you prove that you’re staying where you have stated?” “Can I see some form of identification?” All of these incidents have taken place while I was on a cell phone and walking around the neighborhood. On the first of these encounters a police officer on patrol did a u-turn at a light and proceeded to blind me with the lights from his vehicle. This is assuming that I did not see him as he so clearly saw me late at night. After producing some ID (from the state New Jersey where I was born and raised) I defended myself by telling the officer that I was an alumnus of the school nearby, and that I would begin my doctoral studies at the University of Pennsylvania in the fall. With that information the cop proceeded to leave before I could get his badge number and name. For the record I am a light skinned Puerto Rican who also has a disability, cerebral palsy.

When I shared these experiences with another friend he replied, “well what do you expect, you look Puerto Rican. He probably thought you were from Philadelphia!” Coincidentally I am currently residing in Philadelphia, North Philadelphia to be exact.

If listening with great intent is possible during a conversation on facebook, Rudy waited patiently to share with me some of his own experiences during the June. While in his hometown of Chicago he was stopped in his neighborhood by police and immediately asked “Who do you ride with (what gang)?” While Rudy himself is a light skinned Mexican, such a question assumes that urban Latinos/as and by extension urban Black youth are ill equipped to deal with the racist antics of police that far too often go unchecked and unreported. For the record, Rudy was stopped while in a car by several Mexican cops and one Black cop.

I highlight these experiences to illustrate the kinds of experiences happening all across America on a day-to-day basis. It is perfectly fine, within the context of many of our experiences as residents of urban America to feel anger, resentment, mistrust, and a mixture of fear and awe when it comes to dealing with the police and the power they wield. As such, it is acceptable to trust your initial feelings and respond accordingly. I commend the director of the W.E.B. DuBois Institute for African and African American Studies for being a groundbreaking scholar and expanding the field of African Diaspora studies. More importantly, I commend Gates for sticking up for himself, being fearless, for protecting his right to privacy, and for interrogating the policemen present as they would any of the “unknown urban Black males” Harvard Professor Lawrence Bobo alludes to in his piece “What do you call a Black man with a PhD?”

With time details will begin to emerge as to the specifics surrounding the arrest of Gates (the charges which since then have been dropped). As cultural critic and author Toure would suggest in his piece “Skip’s racist wake up call,” there are serious discrepancies between claims of truth in this particularly story. However, we should not let that obscure the experience of many at the expense of one. There are many truths to tell from these incidents and communities of color have consistently wrestled with pain when considering incidents involving Sean Bell, Anthony Baez, Amadou Diallo, and Oscar Grant. “Disorderly conduct” can be interpreted to mean anything from asking a reasonable question as to the reasons for being stopped, to actual disrespect and disregard for the police. In the former, we are brought back to chargers of “vagrancy,” not producing ID, or not following racial norms in the Jim Crow South.

Gates is absolutely right in asserting that the police were not aware of who they were dealing with. But the fact of that matter is neither do we, the American public. Many of us dealing with police misconduct and harassment in post-industrial urban America did not graduate summa cum laude in history from Yale University. Nor did we receive an M.A. and Ph.D in English literature from Claire College in Cambridge University. Everyday working class folks are far more sophisticated than we give them credit for; they read and engage in critical discourses in spaces such as barbershops, the local library, and the local hangout spot. While some may be aware of Gates’ prolific and far-reaching scholarship, some if not most of us in urban America are unaware of an eight volume set, African American National Biography.

Many in North Philadelphia or my hometown have never heard of Encarta Africana or one of my favorites, The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism. The assumption that Gates is readily recognizable to the average person or Cambridge police for that matter is a rather presumptuous. Figures such as Denzel Washington, T.I., and President Obama are also well known Black men in America. Yet, they too are not immune from incurring the speculative wrath of hostile policemen. Gates is widely recognized and respected within certain spheres where access to resources, institutions and the privileged are the norm rather than the exception. When Michele Obama stated on 60 Minutes that (then) Senator Barack Obama could get shot on his way to the gas station, she spoke of a particular universal experience based on humanity. This sense of self-awareness seems different from the claims made Gates, though he too is speaking as a Black man in America who has obviously been “othered” by the police and neighbors who may well have known who they were calling the cops on. This episode ties Gates’ experience to those of communities of color all across America.

In closing, Henry Louis Gates represents one of he public “faces of America,” an America that has proven itself incapable of being described as anything post racial, post racist, or progressive when dealing with the disabled. The financial, social, cultural, and human capital Gates has access to (representation from fellow Harvard Law Professor Charles Ogletree, an outlet such as PBS, one of the prestigious 20 University Professorships, a Ph.D, a phone call of apology from the mayor of Cambridge, and a shout out from President Obama) and the experience he has been unjustly subjected to are an appropriate place to find a synthesis between theorizing the deconstruction of race and race in practice. Bigotry is alive and well in America. This is just another instance of what hip-hop group the Lost Boyz succinctly described as the “Lifestyles of the Rich and Shameless.” Some instances involving high profile figures such as Gates’ are well known and receive media coverage, while others are incidents pass without print or airtime, gone, but certainly not forgotten. It is all the same game and its time to flex some muscle.

If there is anything to be learned from this injustice, it is that we can use this experience to shed light on similar occurrences across the Diaspora and expand the dialogue to include the long list of the brothers, sisters, mothers and fathers living next door who are unjustly targeted by police precisely because of the way they look, and those who overstep their boundaries as individuals who are allegedly around to “serve and protect.”

***

Wilfredo Gomez is a Doctoral Student in Africana Studies at the University of Pennsylvania.

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50 is the New 25: Blacks and Healthcare



50 is the New 25:
The Crisis for Survival Shifts from Violence to Healthcare
by Mark Anthony Neal

A generation ago, when crack cocaine was the scourge of black communities and hip-hop still wavered between decrying its impact and singing hosannas to the underground economy it enabled, one of the common narratives about black life regarded the mortality rates of young black men. Given the seeming randomness of crime and the level of violence in many of our communities, many of us who came of age in the post-Civil Rights era lived with the expectation that we might not make it to the age of 25. At the time, black male mortality was treated as a national crisis, deserving of national conferences, prayer vigils and the creation of "boys only" charter schools.

Some of us did, indeed, survive, and a term like "40 is the new 30" has become an anthem for a generation that faces middle age with vigor. But the highly publicized death of Michael Jackson at age 50, as well as the deaths in recent years of prominent 50-somethings like comedian Bernie Mac, singer Luther Vandross, actress Lynne Thigpen and dancer Gregory Hines suggest that, despite optimism about the quality of life in middle age, the age of 50 might signal an invisible health crisis in the black community.

Read the Full Essay @ theGRIO

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Wednesday, July 22, 2009

New Book: Black Feminist Politics from Kennedy to Clinton by Duchess Harris


from Palgrave Macmillan

BLACK FEMINIST POLITICS FROM KENNEDY TO CLINTON
Duchess Harris
Contemporary Black History
Pub date: Jul 2009
208 pages

Taking an interdisciplinary approach, this book analyzes Black women's involvement in American political life, focusing on what they did to gain political power between 1961 and 2001, and why, in many cases, they did not succeed. Harris demonstrates that Black women have tried to gain centrality through their participation in Presidential Commissions, Black feminist organizations, theatrical productions, film adaptations of literature, beauty pageants, electoral politics, and Presidential appointments. Harris contends that 'success' in this area means that the feminist-identified Black women in the Congressional Black Caucus who voted against Clarence Thomas's appointment would have spoken on behalf of Anita Hill; Senator Carol Moseley Braun would have won re-election; Lani Gunier would have had a hearing; Dr. Joycelyn Elders would have maintained her post; and Congresswoman Barbara Lee wouldn't have stood alone in her opposition to the Iraq war resolution.

Praise for Black Feminist Politics from Kennedy to Clinton

“I have been longing for a book that can conceptually interweave the legacy of the Combahee River Collective, the longstanding hostility by some in the black community toward the movie The Color Purple, and the political style of Congresswoman Barbara Lee. Black Feminist Politics from Kennedy to Clinton offers us a little known political history--it is required reading for any serious student and scholar of contemporary African American’s women’s political participation. This book provides readers a new and valuable conceptual landscape of how African American feminists have engaged electoral and cultural politics despite consistent and powerful opposition. What a refreshing and much needed addition!”--Michele Tracy Berger, Author of Workable Sisterhood: The Political Journey of Stigmatized Women with HIV/AIDS

Table of contents

Part I: The ‘90s in Context: A History of Black Women in American Politics
Part II: A History of American Black Feminism
Part III: Black Women’s Relationships with Party Politics
Part IV: Doubting the Democrats: Current Disenchantment and Political Futures

***

Duchess Harris, Ph.D., is an Associate Professor of American Studies at Macalester College. She is the co-editor with Bruce D. Baum of the forthcoming Racially Writing the Republic: Racists, Race Rebels, and Transformations of American Identity. She is also a J.D. candidate at William Mitchell College of Law.






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Tuesday, July 21, 2009

The Arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr.



Rage of the Thinking Class
by Mark Anthony Neal

Most accounts of the recent arrest of Henry Louis Gates, Jr. for disorderly conduct have described the 58-year-old Harvard scholar as the pre-eminent black scholar in the country—a leading public intellectual. Gates is loosely aligned with a particular generation of black public intellectuals like Cornel West, bell hooks, Michael Eric Dyson, Patricia J. Williams, and Manning Marable who came to prominence in the late 1980s and early 1990s—paragons of a contemporary American “thinking” class.

While many of these public intellectuals engaged a representational politics that interrogated the realities in which race, gender, sexuality, class and ethnicity are lived within American society, Professor Gates took the concept of a “marketplace of ideas” at face value; his “public” was rarely discrete from the marketplace. He boldly proclaimed that he was an intellectual entrepreneur and branded the field of Black Studies, much like Russell Simmons helped brand hip-hop and Barack Hussein Obama successfully branded himself as “change.” Few of us at elite institutions that can claim that we haven’t benefitted from Professor Gates’ entrepreneurial vision for the field of Black Studies.

According to a statement by his attorney—the equally prominent Harvard legal scholar Charles Ogletree—Gates had returned home from a trip to China where he was working on a documentary for PBS. Upon his return Gates found that his front door was jammed and after entering his home from the rear, turning off the alarm, Gates with the help of his driver jarred open the front door. Shortly thereafter Gates observed a police officer in his doorway who preceded to tell Gates that he was investigating a burglary. What ensued afterward is up for debate with the officer claiming in his report that Gates was belligerent, among other things, and that Gates at one point told the officer he would follow him outside to “see his mama.” That the officer implies that Professor Gates used language more appropriate for a Blaxploitation character from 35 years ago suggest that neither individual was doing much listening in this exchange. That said, few would begrudge Professor Gates’ rage or anyone else’s for that matter, in response to the questioning his right to be in his own home. The randomness of the officer’s assault on Professor Gates’ civil rights challenges claims that his privilege might protect him in such cases.

Though Professor Gates might be unknown to the average viewer of BET, in the parlance of his profession he is easily one of the most recognizable “Negroes” on the planet. That he is legitimately the most well known black person at Harvard University and Cambridge at large is beyond dispute. That any Cambridge police officer would not recognize Professor Gates or adhere to the confirmation by campus police that the figure he was arresting was indeed Professor Gates raises obvious suspicions—yet another iteration of the “uppity Negro” backlash that has reached a fever pitch in the Obama era. Thus Professor Gate’s charge of racism, in light of a Cambridge, MA police officer accosting him in his own home strikes a particular chord. Never given to the professional machinations comprising contemporary race politics—he’s been more Ralph Bunche than Malcolm X—Professor Gates’ response to the officer’s actions is so out of character that those familiar with the scholar’s professional profile would have to assume that the officer had crossed some line. Indeed the Cambridge police thought so also; the charges against Professor Gates were dropped.

But the attention that the case has attracted raises more troubling issues about which black bodies really matter. Few blacks—and fellow black scholars for that matter—are fortunate to have Charles Ogletree on their speed dial; or edit an on-line magazine in collaboration with The Washington Post and Newsweek Magazine. Indeed Antwi Akom, a professor of Sociology and Africana Studies at San Francisco State University didn’t have such a profile when he was arrested in front of his campus office in October of 2005 while retrieving books.

Without asking for or allowing Professor Akom to produce his campus ID, the officer arrested him while his children sat in his car. Professor Akom was formally charged with resisting arrest. Campus administration remained silent about the case, though the charges were eventually dropped months later. Professor Akom’s case didn’t generate the kind of attention that the Gates case has, but Professor Akom benefitted from a network of scholars and activists who spoke out about a clear case of racial profiling and Professor Akom’s unimpeachable reputation. What’s to be said though, for those folk for which such experiences range from a regular nuisance to real incidences of terror and death, far too frequent to even document?

This was a point that was made by one of my former students who upon hearing about Gates arrest, the former student joked that perhaps Gates should have been “carrying those DNA results from African American Lives when he found out he was 67% white.” As the former student, currently a teacher in New York City, further explained “if you put an officer in a position where they can be helpful, by answering their questions and asking for assistance, it can defuse a very tense situation…The louder you get the more you resemble Raekwon Jenkins and the closer you get to jail. Be compliant and if you still feel like you were wronged then file a complaint later.” His points are well taken and a product of the common sense logic that is developed within the context of a world where the kind of confrontation that Gates had is so commonplace. Call it every day survival instincts. Our concerns should reflect the regularity of such abuse, not just the selective outrage that befits those of more privilege.

***

Mark Anthony Neal is Professor of Black Popular Culture in the Department of African & African-American Studies at Duke University. An author of several books including the recent New Black Man, Neal is a regular contributor to The Root.com and SeeingBlack.com.

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Monday, July 20, 2009

Traveling Music: The Walkman Turns 30



Traveling Music: The Walkman Turns 30
by Mark Anthony Neal

The Sony Walkman turns 30 years-old this month and though it’s no longer on the cutting edge of music listening technology, the revolution it wrought in listening habits continues to have major ramifications, including recent debates about the so-called “death” of Black Radio.

When the SONY Walkman first debuted in 1979, some critics weren’t quite sure how to describe the music player. In their 1980 review of the Walkman, the New York Times highlights the Walkman’s utility for joggers: “The Sony Walkman is a lightweight portable cassette player with headphones that adds a new dimension to jogging. It allows the runner to listen to music, or other taped recordings, without disturbing other joggers.” Clearly they w ere unprepared for the Walkman’s popularity; SONY would sell 50 million Walkman in the first decade of its availability.

The success of the Walkman was tied to an age old human concern—how to take your music with you. Indeed the issue of portability is what fueled innovation throughout the 20th century in relationship popular music listening habits. When the first commercial radio stations began to appear in the United States in the early 1920s, the radio became a integral part of family oriented entertainment, developing hand-in-hand with the development of phonographs and the recording industry. When television began to get a foothold in American households in the late 1940s, it represented a real challenge to radio. The radio industry responded with the development of the first generation of transistor radios in the 1950s. At the time, radios were often bulky space devouring contraptions—not unlike early televisions. What the transistor radio—or pocket radio—represented was a technology whose primary feature was its portability. Not surprisingly the first product that SONY introduced to the United States was a pocket transistor radio.

The explosion of the popular music industry in the mid-1950s with the so-called birth of “Rock ‘n Roll” is virtually unimaginable without the emergence of the transistor radio and the introduction of car radios as standard in American automobiles. Both addressed issues of portability—listening to the sounds of the Flamingos on a starry night—and privacy, as American youth could listen—eavesdrop really—to the burgeoning sounds of Rhythm and Blues and Soul emanating from Black America, without the close scrutiny of parents and other adults. As Motown founder Berry Gordy has remarked on numerous occasions, the production quality of Motown recordings in the 1960s was pitched to how the music might sound on a car or transistor radio.

By the time the SONY Walkman appears in 1979, the issue of portability and personal choice had pushed the development of various musical media, as the phonograph presented obvious limitations. The 8-Track cartridge was but one attempt to address the need for, not only portability, but to increase the amount of music available in one sitting. Even LPs—long playing albums—had to be turned over at some point. The 8-Track gained popularity in the late 1960s and 1970s because it could play in an endless loop. When the technology proved unreliable—there’s many a story about the 8-Track Player that ate your favorite 8-Track cartridge—the compact cassette emerged as the media of choice.

The major appeal of the compact cassette was the ability for users to dub recordings from their own collection creating the first generation of home mix tapes of both recorded music and dubs of on-air radio broadcasts. For example, one of the narratives that explains the growing popularity of rap music in the 1980s was the transport of rap broadcasts from major metropolises to small town America, particularly college towns, via dub recordings on compact cassettes. By the end of the 1980s the cassette had emerged as one of the most popular forms of pre-recorded music and the popularity of the SONY Walkman—and its many derivatives including the Discman, SONY’s first portable compact disc player—was largely the reason for it.

With the introduction of MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3 technology (MP3) in the 1990s, and the iPod brand of portable players emerging as the most popular choice, with over 200 million sold since its introduction in 2001, the Walkman has become a relic . But the issue of portability that the Walkman helped to initially solve still has important ramifications as the popularity of MP3 players has challenged the once dominant role of radio as a primary delivery system of music. With individual music lovers literally walking around with a personal archive many have turned off the radio. For parents driving during afternoon drive time in a mini-van full of kids, the “Kiddie” playlist on an MP3 player is a safer option than submitting yourself to the always shifting standards of the local “urban” radio station.

As the issue of portability will always remain, there’s little doubt that we’ll be memorializing the iPod, much the way we pay tribute to the Walkman today.

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Saturday, July 18, 2009

Michael A. Gonzales on D'Angelo



Black Pop Kool-Aid: D’Angelo’s “Left & Right”

July 17, 2009 ·
By Michael A. Gonzales

“To me, there is a difference between artists and stars,” soul singer D’Angelo told me way back in 1995. And there was no doubt that he placed himself in the former category no matter how much the rest of the world wanted to place him as the latter. “I don’t want people to tell me how great I sound, but then I don’t build on it,” he added. “What comes first is the music. I want to make dope music. It’s been like that from the beginning and it’s going to stay like that.”

Twenty-one years old at the time, the former child gospel singer named Michael Eugene Archer was in the process of transforming himself into a powerhouse soul man with his stunning debut disc Brown Sugar.

Yet five years after the release of that groundbreaking album, which sowed the seeds of the so-called neo-soul revolution, the young Virginia native had a lot riding on his sophomore project Voodoo. Literarily taking his sophisticated sound to the “next level,” D’Angelo’s Voodoo was a stunning work of art that quickly became the talk of the town.

Nevertheless, following the runaway success of the damn-near pornographic (some prefer the term provocative) video for the second single “Untitled (How Does it Feel)” and a subsequent sold-out tour, D’Angelo retreated from the spotlight.

With the exception of a few cameos including an appearance on Q-Tip’s 2008 album The Renaissance, the man many hoped would be the savior of R&B has been musically inactive since 2001. There were reports about his escalating depressions and alleged drug use, and it looked as if the rigorous demands of the music business caused the young artist to have a classic rock-star crack-up.

In last year’s Spin magazine article “Body & Soul,” Roots drummer and former D’Angelo collaborator Ahmir “?usestlove” Thompson asserted that the pressures of being considered a pin-up boy put the brother over the edge.

“Everybody is not built to be a sex symbol,” agrees Nelson George, author of the recently released autobiography City Kid and the classic soul book The Death of Rhythm & Blues. “Just look at how it fucked up his hero Marvin Gaye.”

Read the Full Essay @ SoulSummer

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Billie!



Half a century after her death, Billie Holiday's music remains a cornerstone of the American songbook.

A Song for Lady Day

by Stanley Crouch

“Billie Holiday was, and still remains, the greatest single musical influence on me. Lady Day is unquestionably the most important influence on American popular singing in the last 20 years.”
—Frank Sinatra, 1958

Life is ultimately mysterious and indifferent about whom it gives much and from whom it expects a measure equal to its gifts. Those gifts are passed out with the same careless precision as handfuls of chicken feed hurled into a high wind.

Billie Holiday was obviously given much more than most, and her talent revealed itself through her intensity, her phrasing and her control of nuance more so than the conventional strengths of big sound, great range and stunning projection. Her voice was small, and her range was equally small. Standing next to most singers, she would never get you to put your money on her, unless you knew in advance that her emotional force and her ability to summon pathos, joy and melancholy with naked precision would demolish almost anyone intent on making a contest out of a hazardous moment on the bandstand with her.

There the story of one performance with super virtuoso Sarah Vaughan. Vaughan was so profoundly endowed with a superior instrument that she sometimes could not avoid strutting her stuff to the point of obnoxiousness. But the ax fell. When Vaughan called up “I Cried For You,” Holiday whispered, “You done screwed up now, bitch. That’s my song.”

Read the Full Essay @ The Root.com

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Baseball: Where Are All the Black Men and Boys?



Running Away from Baseball
by Mark Anthony Neal
July 14, 2009

When the rosters for Major League Baseball's All-Star Game were announced, only 10 black players, including the Orioles' Adam Jones, were among the 64 picked for the American League and National League rosters. Among the 16 players chosen as starters by fan vote, only Derek Jeter of the Yankees is African-American.

The 1979 All-Star Game, by contrast, featured 16 African-American players, including seven starters and seven future Hall-of-Famers.

In 2009, a little more that 10 percent of all Major League Baseball players are black - the first increase in more than a decade but still a far cry from the close to 30 percent mark achieved in the mid-1970s. The diminishing presence of African-American players has reached such a point that many historically black colleges and universities explicitly recruit white and Latino players to field full-fledged teams.

There are many theories about the decline. Some cite the inability of Major League Baseball to successfully market the game to black youth like the National Basketball Association and National Football League do. And although it generally costs less to attend a baseball game than an NBA or NFL game, some do cite the expense as a deterrent, a charge that golfer Tiger Woods recently reiterated when talking about ticket prices at the new Yankee Stadium.

Then there's the increase of international players, particularly from Asia and Latin America. The latter dynamic led Gary Sheffield, a black 20-year veteran, to suggest to GQ magazine in 2007 that the increased presence of Latino players was due to the fact they were "easier to control."

One explanation is that many poor youth are simply challenged by the lack of available space and equipment to play baseball. Longtime music executive and baseball fan Bill Stephney suggests another reason for the diminishing presence of black baseball players. According to Mr. Stephney, baseball lost legitimacy in black communities when black fathers became marginalized in those same communities.

There is merit in Mr. Stephney's observation. Unlike basketball, which youngsters can learn by watching older youth play the game, the game of baseball requires a certain level of organization and instruction that, very often, only adults can provide. Indeed, my own father sparked my interest in baseball as a youth; I can't imagine I would have become interested in the sport without his involvement.

My father belonged to a post- World War II generation of American men who were youths themselves when Jackie Robinson broke the sport's color barrier, an act loudly cheered by those struggling against legal segregation.

It bears noting that among the current black ballplayers in the majors a significant number are sons of former majors leaguers, including John Mayberry Jr. of the Phillies, Gary Matthews Jr. of the Angels and Prince Fielder of the Brewers. All three fathers - John Mayberry Sr., Gary Matthews Sr. and Cecil Fielder - were All-Stars during their careers.

More telling are the examples of brothers Dmitri and Delmon Young and B.J. and Justin Upton. The Young brothers were the first siblings to be drafted among the first five picks of baseball's amateur draft in 1991 and 2003, respectively, and the Uptons were among the top two picks in the 2002 and 2005 drafts. Both sets of brothers talk about how their fathers were instrumental in their careers, with baseball serving as the common language that bridged the generation gap.

The late Buck O'Neil, a veteran of the Negro Leagues and later one of baseball's great ambassadors, once suggested that kids never recall going to their first basketball game with their fathers - but that is often the case with baseball.

Last month, President Barack Obama promoted the importance of being a good dad, saying he wanted to start a "national conversation" on the subject. Maybe part of that conversation could take place on a baseball diamond, with fathers and sons and a bag filled with balls, bats and gloves.

***

Mark Anthony Neal, a lifelong New York Mets fan, teaches African-American Studies at Duke University. He is the author of several books, including the recent "New Black Man."

Copyright © 2009, The Baltimore Sun


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Thursday, July 16, 2009

Simona Halep Swats the Ball!

Reviewed: James Hannaham's God Says No



Big, Gay and Christian
by Walter Biggins

James Hannaham's novel "God Says No" (McSweeney's, 2009, $22) chronicles the coming-of-age of Gary Gray, a man who loves Jesus and Disney World in almost equal measures. But he loves his college roommate, Russ, almost as much as he loves Christ, and not at all in the same way. For an overweight black man dreaming of the Christian life in Orlando, that dormant homosexuality is a lit firecracker ready to go off in his hands.

The novel works both as a wicked satire of conservative Christianity and as a sensitive portrait of a struggling Christian. Hannaham's contemporary South is a complicated place, where lust makes people strange, and love comes in more varieties than man-woman couplings. Through Gray's example, Hannaham shows how God might say "no" to Christians' rejection of homosexuality. The novel's so good, though, that God might just say "yes" to it.

Read the Full Review @ The Jackson Free Press

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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

The Music of Spike Lee



WUNC - The State of Things with Frank Stasio

The Music of Spike Lee

From “Do the Right Thing” to “Get on the Bus,” director Spike Lee’s movies are rife with social and political commentary. So it’s no wonder a college professor would mine the director’s repertoire for class discussion. But this fall, Duke Professor Mark Anthony Neal is looking beyond the scripts. His class, “Spike Lee and the New Black Aesthetic,” will examine the messages in Lee’s work and the impact his films had on black cultural arts. Today, Neal joins host Frank Stasio to give us a course preview and talk about the powerful music in Lee's movies.

Listen @ The State of Things

Read "The Music in Spike Message" @ The Root.com

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Vibe Magazine and the "Death" of Criticism?



With diminishing resources available for thoughtful and accessible criticism, mainstream black cultural critics exists as little more than commentators on the Obama White House and complainers about Black Entertainment Television. Blackness has been reduced to a news cycle.

The Demise of Vibe Magazine and the Future of Criticism
by Mark Anthony Neal

There’s no small irony to the fact that the announcement of the folding of Vibe Magazine occurred the day after the death of Michael Jackson. Though Jackson’s career was on the downside in the United States when Vibe Magazine published its first issue in September of 1993, the magazine was the product of a cultural landscape that Jackson had a large hand in crafting. Presenting a glossy and urbane view of urban culture, Vibe Magazine became a preeminent site for journalists and scholars chronicling contemporary black popular culture. The lists of writers who can claim a Vibe Magazine by-line represent the cutting edge of a critical intelligentsia, many of them black writers who would have had few other legitimate options to hone their craft. As such the death of Vibe Magazine raises questions about the future of popular criticism at a moment when few print or on-line journals see the value of paying for such content.

Vibe Magazine was launched just as rap music and hip-hop culture were gaining mainstream credibility in terms of delivering a substantial buying audience to advertisers. The galvanizing of that audience was set in motion years earlier when MTV embraced rap music in the form of Yo MTV Raps—an embrace that was made possible, in large part, due to the efforts of Michael Jackson, CBS Records head Walter Yentikoff and Vibe founder Quincy Jones to force MTV to open up its playlists to Jackson, and by extension, other popular black recording artists in the early 1980s. As scholar Todd Boyd recently opined, “In the early ‘90s, hip-hop had made the successful transition from Sedgwick and Cedar through Compton on its way to global dominance. Along the way, as the music grew more and more pervasive, its influence had started to become evident in multiple cultural arenas.” Vibe Magazine was a blatant attempt by Jones and publisher Len Burnett to trade on hip-hop’s increasing commercial and cultural influence. In the process the magazine helped establish a generation of black writers and critics as tastemakers for an American—and increasingly global—public desiring to consume the best of blackness.

Figures like Joan Morgan, Kevin Powell, Toure, Karen Good, Danyel Smith, Michael Gonzalez, and Scott Poulson Bryant—what I’ll call the Vibe Magazine generation—along with seasoned critics like Harry Allen, Greg Tate, Barry Michael Cooper and Nelson George (all veterans of the Village Voice in the 1980s) were among the writers that graced the pages of Vibe Magazine, contributing to what became a late 20th century renaissance of black thought and thinkers. The best of those writers brought contemporary black popular culture in conversation with the rich traditions that came before. At its best the Vibe Magazine generation helped establish the criteria for high-end popular cultural criticism and perhaps the first sustained critical view of black youth culture that was informed by black youth culture.

But Vibe’s success would undermine its very role as a critical arbiter of urban culture and ultimately the legitimacy of accessible mainstream cultural criticism. Many will point to the magazine’s role in the bi-coastal tensions that arose between the Death Row and Bad Boy record label camps, personified in the war of words between the late Tupac Shakur and the late Christopher Wallace. As Boyd suggests, “Vibe’s place as a nexus in this bi-coastal war cemented the magazine’s status as a relevant chronicle of hip-hop’s rapidly expanding evolution from sub-cultural status to mass cultural behemoth. Vibe, like the Washington Post during Watergate, no longer simply reported on the story; the magazine had at this point become an integral part of the very story that it was supposed to be reporting on.”

Equipped with a new sense of gravitas, Vibe became a part of the promotional machine that fueled hip-hop’s invasion of the American mainstream. Vibe Magazine was not alone in this regard; the Source Magazine, particularly after Bakari Kitwana’s editorship, was in many ways far more egregious in this matter, though it never professed the kind of mainstream appeal that Vibe Magazine garnered at its circulation peak. Many of the so called urban journals of the late 1990s and early 21st century had become little more than enablers of hip-hop’s most distasteful excesses instead of providing the kind of critical scrutiny that many expected the magazine to maintain. In the process the very criticism that the magazine was founded on became devalued in a marketplace more interested in access to celebrity lifestyles. Magazines like Vibe were all too aware of the price that was to be paid if they didn’t toe the line. Such was the case when Damon Dash, then of Roc-A-Fella records pulled advertising from the magazine after Elizabeth Mendez Berry’s expose on domestic abuse among hip-hop figures placed the mogul in an unfavorable light.

Though many will cite the current recession as the primary force in Vibe’s demise, the magazine’s closing is just confirmation of a trend that began earlier in the decade when print media became challenged by free Internet content. With a wealth of cultural criticism available, print journals have been hard pressed to justify paying for content such as book reviews, film criticism and music journalism. The use of in-house bloggers has been one of the responses by print journals, though writers are paid a fraction of what they were paid even three years ago. The Internet has been an important component in bringing so many more voices to light—voices that were largely ignored a generation ago—but the democratization of criticism has undermined the value of cultural and critical expertise. Thus figures like Stanley Crouch and John McWhorter can be pitched as credible critics of hip-hop culture, though neither man has expertise on the subject.

With diminishing resources available for thoughtful and accessible cultural criticism (the academy remains a viable option for inaccessible criticism), contemporary mainstream black cultural criticism exists as little more than commentary on the Obama White House and complaints about Black Entertainment Television. Blackness, however more visible, has been reduced to a news cycle. Longtime critic and author Nelson George alluded as much in a recent interview on the Michael Eric Dyson Show when he lamented that with a lack of available venues for black criticism to be nurtured, very often audiences and consumers are unable to discern what is essentially “product” and what is “art.” Increasingly many black critics have taken to publishing their criticism on self-contained blogs and websites, without remuneration, simply to make sure that the story of black culture gets told right. Still others, confronting a public less interested in reading, have begun to produce video blogs and podcast in an effort to maintain a critical public voice. The best critics have been able to adapt to the limitations placed on their writing and I have faith that this generation of black critics will do the same.

Mark Anthony Neal is the author of several books including New Black Man and Songs in the Key of Black Life: A Rhythm and Blues Nation. He is a professor of African-American Studies at Duke University.

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Simona Halep Smash!

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Nationals Men's 50 Meter Free Swim-Off: Cullen Jones Sets New American Record





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Jay-Z on His iPod



special to NewBlackMan



Jay-Z on His iPod:

Barack Obama as a Hip-Hop Generation Pop Icon


by Halifu Osumare



There is little doubt that President Barack Obama has brought a new style---a new panache, if you will---to the White House and the US Presidency. But what are the sources of this new style and approach in his handling of everything from international relations to his cabinet choices, and from his cool demeanor dealing with one of the biggest financial crisis since the Great Depression to taking Michele out on a date night in a trendy DC restaurant? Besides his obvious intelligence and political savvy, Barack Obama has swagger! Barack Obama is hip! Barack Obama is cool! This style that he has brought to the highest office of the land is grounded in what black popular culture scholar Mark Anthony Neal calls the “post-soul generation”---the hip-hop generation.



Case in point: 27-year old Jon Favreau , the valedictorian for the class of 2003 at College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts, is Obama’s chief speech-writer, the second youngest to ever hold that position. The young Favreau was responsible for Obama’s now famous inaugural speech that arguably rivals some of Abraham Lincoln’s speeches, which was exactly the intention. Favreau is said to carry around a copy of Dreams from My Father, Obama’s first autobiography, as his holy grail, and Obama, himself has said that he thinks Favreau “reads his mind.” The point is that Obama has tapped into a youth current that was partially responsible for electing him as the 44th President of the U.S., and this youth-factor is constituent of his style that appeals to the current hip-hop generation. As LA Times journalist Sam Fulwood III analyzes, “Young is to hip as old is to fogey . . . Obama has modern instincts and attitudes that appeal to younger people, and more than any other president in recent memory, that makes him a role model. He is green, open, athletic, tech-savvy, healthy. And his hip image certainly isn’t hurt by his wife,” Michele Obama, who has captured the world’s imagination in her own right.



Even the statistics show how sophisticated his presidential campaign was. According to Gwen Ifill, PBS-TV moderator, managing editor of Washington Week, and senior correspondent of the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, “In the general election, Obama improved on 2004 nominee John Kerry’s performance with voters under thirty by 12 percent,” and there was “a little over thirteen million new voters jumping into the process,” . . . and among those new voters Barack Obama won close to 70 % of them. Part of his strategy from the beginning was [to] change the face of the electorate.” Changing of the face of the electorate is the primary factor that won him the election; this change had a lot to do with the number of youths who got engaged in electoral politics for the first time.



As a great communicator, known for his oratory, President Obama is also a cultural code switcher—one who can use language, mannerism, and symbols to communication with various audiences---a black audience, a youth audience, and a hip-hop audience. He is very aware of his popularity with the hip-hop generation and has directly addressed his penchant for some rap music and artists.



This youth factor responsible for electing President Obama is not simply lodged in the positive aspects of generational politics, but has also generated negative aspects that challenged the old-guard black leaders of the Civil Rights Generation, preceding the post-soul generation or the contemporary hip-hop generation born in the 1980 and 90s. As Ifill accurately opines in her The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama, “Obama did not argue that he was not a black candidate, but the generational split did in some ways transcend race,” with many seasoned white politicians being brought into the Obama camp by pressure from their own children. At the same time, to the old-guard civil rights activists like Andrew Young, Congressman John Lewis, former presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, the Reverend Calvin Butts of Abyssinian Baptist Church in Harlem, and Oakland Mayor Ron Dellums, all of whom endorsed Hillary Clinton for president, Obama represented a black upstart candidate who had not come through their dues-paying ranks.



Yet a few of the old guard did make the generational transition: Roger Wilkins, assistant attorney general under Lyndon Johnson, has said, “I love this transition, because my generation has done its work. Whatever one thinks of the result of that work, it was consequential work, and it did help change the nation. But now we’re old. And there are people whose path we made possible who see the country very, very differently than we did.” Though Obama is steeped in this different vision, he is definitely grounded in the past efforts of the Civil Rights generation. This was evident in his November 4th acceptance speech when he called the nation’s attention to the 106-year old African American Mrs. Ann Cooper, who voted for him in Atlanta. However, he created breakthrough politics with his ability to change the face of the electorate in a way that previous black leaders had not been able to accomplish. The generational divide worked in Obama’s favor, along with his intelligence, emphasis on transparency in government, and most of all his “cool pose” that appealed to the younger generation.



This generational meaning of Obama has shown itself also in the plethora of pop iconic images that proliferate magazine covers, street posters, and, of course, the Internet. During the campaign the famous red, white, and blue “HOPE” print created by street artist Shepard Fairey emerged as a veritable sign that signifies Obama the Man. This iconic image later got Fairey arrested for graffiti (a direct attack on hip-hop as a suspect subculture) for papering the now famous poster throughout the city of Boston. In cyberspace, there is even a “Obamaicon.Me.com” website where you can now upload your own photo, choose your own message, and they will make you a similar “Hope” poster for your own 20-minutes of fame in this era of reality television and the cult of personality. As the Obamaicon website says, “Here’s your chance to sound off.” Barack Obama has inspired various pop culture cottage industries that were initially meant to commercialize his image, but have now generated numerous spin-offs that are stretching our definition of democracy and the place of the populist everyman/everywoman’s voice (and now image) in the process.



This youthful Obama design rage has infinite ramifications. Journalist art designer Don Button reveals the effect of Obama’s original use of design and the internet in his campaign: “Never before had a presidential candidate utilized design aesthetics and brand-image marketing in such a comprehensive and effective way---and the designers around the world took notice immediately.” Since Obama first started campaigning and developing his tech-savvy and design–savvy branding, like Spike Lee’s Joint, it became a “Barack Obama Joint” that “Did the Right Thing” to get elected, including having a seasoned older generation politician as his running mate in Joe Biden. All of this showed political know-how, capturing the younger generation that changed the electorate in the 2008 presidential election.



But none of these unprecedented generational socio-cultural dynamics around Obama can be understood without the lens of hip-hop. One of the main tenets of this in-your-face rebellious youth sub-culture is “flippin’ the script,” a cultural directive that is responsible for the best of rap music as a counter-narrative to mainstream ideologies. As Neal has accurately analyzed, rap music is often the initial reply to topical news stories affecting black people. “Whether it’s Katrina four years ago, the LA riots in 1993, or Jesse Jackson’s run for President in 1984 . . ., hip-hop was seen as black American’s first response.” This statement becomes an addendum to Chuck D’s famous adage: “Rap is black people’s CNN.” So it is no wonder that many famous and infamous rap stars got on the Obama campaign bandwagon: Young Jeezy’s “My President” was an early anthem during the campaign, Nas released “Election Night” the day before the November 4 election, and it got major Internet play the day of the election; Brother Ali released “Mr. President (You’re the Man)”, and Lil Wayne reworked his previous song “A Mili” renaming it “Obama Obama.” And not only did they rap about Obama as a new hope for young, struggling black people, but they all voted for the first time. Young Jeezy represented for all first-time voting rappers with: “ Yeah, Yeah, I got to vote. It felt like I went and bought my first car without a co-sign; it felt good.” Because of Obama’s new voice, his new message, young Black America stood on its own for the first time in the electoral process because they had hope.



Neal assesses that Candidate Obama had to walk a thin line between accepting these young rappers’ endorsements while maintaining the dignity of his legitimate candidacy with the socio-political mainstream, both black and white. Neal articulates the proverbial special constituency vs. mainstream quagmire when he gives voice to Obama’s strategy regarding his hip-hop supporters: “[He was saying] I really can’t acknowledge you in the mainstream, but understand that I’m hearing what your critique is, I’m hearing what your concerns are, and you now have a wide-open space in the so-called underground . . .to talk about why my candidacy is important.” However, now that he is President, he has become bolder in hinting that he may utilize hip-hop in his administration. When asked by a Vibe magazine journalist about “a place in your administration” to explore the use of hip-hop’s potential to deal with “young people that you have to deal with around education and incarceration,” Obama became emphatically clear:



Absolutely, I don’t think there can be any doubt that it can be. And I have met with Jay-Z, with Kanye, and with other artists to see how potentially to bridge that gap. It’s incredible--- the potential for them to deliver a message to get people thinking. The thing about hip-hop today is it’s smart. It’s insightful. The way that they can communicate a complex message in a very short space is remarkable. A lot of these kids are not going to be reading The New York Times. That’s not how they’re getting their information. So the question then is what’s the content? What’s the message? And I always say hip-hop is not only a reflection of what is; but it should be a reflection of what can be.



No only does Obama understand how rap music has been used as a vehicle for information delivery, but he is thinking about its potential for the kinds of messages that he wants to convey to the young people of urban America.



Neal further reveals that mainstream cross-over emcees, like Queen Latifah who has hosted the Academy Awards Ceremony, and Snoop Dogg who appeared on the Larry King Show to talk about the Obama candidacy, utilize similar strategies in negotiating their own mainstream celebrity with their underground hip-hop cult following. These are ostensibly what I call “power moves” in The Africanist Aesthetic in Global Hip-Hop: Power Moves. I contend that there has been a virtual “cultural shift in power induced by hip-hop’s privileged place in the marketplace,” even as there continues to be what Keith Negus calls “regimes of containment” that limit young black hip-hop males. This dynamic of containment of black males in US society has existed historically and continues even in this era of the ghetto as a central trope regarding how youth of all races identify themselves through hip hop. Linda Tucker explores this dynamic in her recent book Lockstep and Dance: Images of Black Men in Popular Culture. She analyzes:



Black men function within a prison writ large structured by various technologies of containment ranging from actual prisons to representational practices. Black men are subject to techniques of containment that criminalize their images and render them silent, depending on the context, either threatening or comic, hypervisible or invisible. Despite their heterogeneity and pervasive presence, however, such technologies do not function absolutely, as they are constantly subjected to equally heterogeneous and pervasive responses, reversals, and forms of resistance enacted by black men.
These reversals, or flippin’ the script, have been a part of the Africanist aesthetic in our rhetorical, musical, and dance traditions for centuries, and they show themselves in unique ways in hip-hop that has captured the imagination of today’s generation. It is this cultural shift, created by hip-hop’s cultural, economic, and now political, power moves that have aided Obama in the era of 21st century late capitalist politics.



There is no doubt that we are in the era of the Hip-Hop Generation when the President of the United States has admitted to having arguably the most influential rapper, Jay-Z, on his iPod. Furthermore, during his North Carolina come-back speech, after the April 16, 2008 debate between Candidate Obama and his opponent Hillary Rodham Clinton, Obama showed his acuity with hip-hop style by executing Jay-Z’s brush the dirt off your shoulders, creating a wild audience reaction with a standing ovation. Hip-hop semiotics, such as the Dirt-off-my Shoulder move, are significations that communicate to a large number of young U.S. citizens, and can be successful exploited to win in electoral politics. As Teresa Wiltz says in a Washington Post article on Obama’s North Carolina hip-hop gesture, “Talk about a major Jay-Z move. People, we’re talking about a seminal movement in the campaign, the merging of politics and pop culture: in which a presidential candidate---a self-confessed hip-hop head and Jay-Z fan--references a rap hit and a dance move.” The gesture is a direct quotation from the rap and video “Dirt off Your Shoulder” on Jay-Z’s 2003 Black Album. The meaning is clear: Obama is the proverbial duck, from whose back water just rolls right off. In politics one must brush off the negative jabs that one’s opponents (“playa haters”) might inflict. Obama had to frequently do just that during the Democratic Primary Campaign with Clinton in order to debate the real issues facing the U.S.



Of course these challenges have only intensified for Obama as President. He will have to continue to navigate his course between mainstream America and the hip-hop generation in increasingly savvy ways that keep all constituencies in his boat. One huge task is the creation of a living wage for young black men, when some black communities are reeling from 31% unemployment. As hip-hop activist and 2008 vice- presidential candidate for the Green Party, Rosa Clemente said, “just because you brush off your shoulders, fist bump the First Lady, or play a mean game of street ball, doesn’t make you Hip Hop.” Youth who live hip-hop want him to “keep it real” in terms of their needs on the street, and to do this he has his job cut out for him. He has to somehow blend his youthful coolness with the dignity and seriousness that the office demands, while making real changes happen in people’s lives economically. But if he follows the age-old pervasive adage that has permeated the African American community for generations—“You can’t be just as good; you have to be twice as good to get ahead in this world”—he’ll do just fine.



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Halifu Osumare is Associate Professor of African American and African Studies at University of California, Davis and the author of The Africanist Aesthetic in Global Hip-Hop: Power Moves.







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