Monday, August 31, 2009

Representation, Re-Presentation, and Resurrection


"I left America because I doubted my ability to survive the fury of the color problem here. (Sometimes I still do.) I wanted to prevent myself from becoming merely a Negro; or even, merely a Negro writer. I wanted to find out in what way the specialness of my experience could be made to connect me with other people instead of dividing me from them. (I was as isolated from Negroes as I was from whites, which is what happens when a Negro begins, at bottom, to believe what white people say about him.)…It was Bessie Smith, through her tone and her cadence, who helped me to dig back to the way I myself must have spoken when I was a pickaninny, and to remember the things I had heard and seen and felt. I had buried them very deep. I had never listened to Bessie Smith in America (in the same way that, for years, I would never touch watermelon), but in Europe she helped to reconcile me to being a ‘nigger.” - James Baldwin



For as long as I could remember, I always wanted to be myself. I wanted to be happy and fulfilled in my being. I wanted to share my very essence with those around me. In growing up, this all seemed to be the stuff of dreams - the things only babies and fools are brave enough to imagine and make real. For almost as long as I can remember the burning desire for finding comfort in who I am, I remember the confrontations I faced.


"Why are you talking about black shit?" "Why do you wear your hair that way?" "Why do you listen to THAT music?" "You are crazy as hell for wanting to go to a black school?" What are you anyway, some kinda Black Panther or something?" "Any bean pies, Brotha Malcolm?"


Some things you never forget.


I thought a lot about these comments over the past few weeks. Many of them came from genuine places or were simply jokes. Others were examples of sincere stupidity. Whatever the case may be I always found it odd that the majority of negative criticism I received over the years concerning my artistic, political, or philosophic inclinations were said by my black friends and acquaintances.


The root of the issue that no one wants to acknowledge is that there are some aspects of the black experience that are just too taboo to discuss or respect. Those who are honest about some of the things our people think, feel, and believe are vilified and marginalized.


They are "militant", uneducated, or "playing the race card".


Everyone else by contrast is acceptable. These are the good niggahs...


"Don't say that! Don't you know de white folks is listenin?" are the words that echo in my mind as I write this, and yet I feel all the more empowered to continue.


It is our destiny to be ourselves completely and without apology.


But here is the catch.






Who are we? Who were we before we got HERE? Who are we? Who were we before he said/she said who we are supposed to be? Who said we either have to sag our pants or conk our hair? Who? Who are we now? Can we separate BET from reality?


At what point do we desire to separate the stereotype from the self?


We can't begin to answer these questions until we confront representation. But somehow we've gotten comfortable with the images. We've gotten comfortable with the effeminization and emasculation of our men, and the roughness of our women who distrust them and have to protect and provide for themselves. Somewhere we got comfortable and thought 13 year old girls pushing strollers was cute and little boys imitating Beyonce' videos was adorable.


We can't resurrect ourselves from the dead until we recognize that these things do not equal the sum of our being and how we ought to live. We can't transcend the cross until we realize that education, not imprisonment is our birthright.


We cannot be reborn until we desire to be fully human again despite the pressure to be slaves to materialism and a culture of death and destruction.


We must refuse to become something created outside of ourselves. We don't need to be re-presented when our voices of truth drown out the lies. We must be resurrected. Our future and our legacy depends on it.



Peace to my beloved professor Dr. Gregory Carr for all of his dedication in waking up the dead.


Stay Woke!


P.S. There are messages in the music!

Current Playlist: "Twinkle" and "Master Teacher" - New Amerykah, Part One: 4th World War by Erykah Badu and "Sincerely, Jane" on the Metropolis Suite I of IV: The Chase EP by Janelle Monae. Give the tracks a thorough listen if you haven't or find and read the lyrics.

3 comments:

  1. I think you put entirely too much on the concept of 'identity' from birthright. The idea of the Black umbrella is a flawed one. I grew up having to wake up at 4AM every single morning, muck some stalls, feed animals, and walking them out of the barn before going to school, every...single...goddamn...morning. I wouldn't even have the chance of doing homework until 8 or 9 at night at which time I was exhausted - not to mention the incessant gang violence in our school district. Howard was honestly a fucking relaxed joke compared to my childhood. Which slowly brings me into my next point.

    How are you and I going to call ourselves we? The only thing we have in likeness is skin color and school choice. 'We' is already an exclusive term of endearment, but I don't see the 'we' in anything. Maybe I am missing something? People don't typically go around judging by skin color unless you let them. Give them excuse to judge you as a silver-spooned White kid, some AA Negro who barely makes it through, Jorge or another Nguyen who excels in math and you WILL feel re-presented. It's going to happen no matter where you go, or what you do. if it's not because you are black, it's because you're American - if not that then something else.

    Fear, respect and love. Build a reputation on these three and people will spend much less time on what you are, and more time on what you can do. You are a smart man Mr. G, but maybe a bit too smart. Spend less time thinking, might be that time to buckle down and get your hands dirty a bit to prove to everyone you've got the minerals.

    Peace.

    And Dr. Carr is God.

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  2. I understand where you're coming from, mainly because I've been there. It's often interesting to hear people say, "We're AMERICANS now," as if to say that we have 'arrived.' American, to me is more of an insult than a badge of honor, because it reduces me far more than it edifies. For me, to say that I'm more American than I am Black is like Kal El trying to convince himself that he LIKES being Clark Kent. For me to wear the mask that grins a lies costs me far more than it garners. Not only does the mask eventually chafe and blister, but it blinds. It blinds one to the body of work left to be done, and more importantly, it blinds him to his awe-inspiring potential. While this course may make my road a hard one, I refuse to be the socially inept, politically inept, 'good one,' in order to protect the fragile sensibilities of those who have harbored nothing but antipathy towards me for as long as I've been here.

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  3. I appreciate the commentary. Im grateful for the feedback!

    @one of those guys

    My issue of the "we" is that regardless of the differences in upbringing etc. people do lump us together and furthermore all of us are still subjected to the same imagery of an "us" that is in many instances very alien to our experiences and being.

    The question then is "What do we do about it?". It would be foolish to think it doesn't matter when so many of the young people I interact with on a daily basis simply cannot envision themselves outside of this "cultural poverty" without being an athlete or entertainer.

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