african studies(1page for each question) - Reading
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
All assignments are due by 11:59 PM MST on the due date. Voice threads are due on Fridays and
Quizzes are due by Sunday.
The Norton Anthology readings for the first (2) weeks of class are provided in the Google Drive folder.
Class About Due
August 24
(LIVE ZOOM)
Class:
General introduction to the course and all of the
modalities we will use.
Read:
● Syllabus
September 5th
● VoiceThread 1 -
Self-Introduction
September 5th
● Sign up for your
Author
Discussion
● Quiz 1 & 2 -
Syllabus,
Wheatley, Truth
and Walker
August 26
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to Spatial, functionality and use.
Discussion of how we will use it in class.
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ “The Literature of Slavery and Freedom”
(pp. 75–86)
Watch/Listen:
● Best of: Jamiles Lartey On Racism In
Policing / Pete Davidson & Judd Apatow
August 31
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to African American literary tradition,
oral tradition, folktales etc.
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ “Phillis Wheatley” (pp.137–150)
Watch/Listen:
● The “Miscegenation” Troll
● Browns Descendants Return To Harpers
Ferry
● Why African-Americans Loathe Uncle Tom
● Lincoln and Douglass Shared Uncommon
Bond
● Harriet (Tubman) The Spy
September 5th
● VoiceThread 1 -
Self-Introduction
September 5th
● Sign up for your
Author
Discussion
● Quiz 1 & 2 -
Syllabus,
Wheatley, Truth
and Walker
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/10y92etBpXbXsGEfAzRbvn7c92uj4f3DV?usp=sharing
https://www.npr.org/2020/06/12/875896131/best-of-jamiles-lartey-on-racism-in-policing-pete-davidson-judd-apatow
https://www.npr.org/2020/06/12/875896131/best-of-jamiles-lartey-on-racism-in-policing-pete-davidson-judd-apatow
https://daily.jstor.org/the-miscegenation-troll/?utm_term=The\%20\%5Cu201CMiscegenation\%5Cu201D\%20Troll&utm_campaign=jstordaily_02142019&utm_content=email&utm_source=Act-On+Software&utm_medium=email
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113911976
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113911976
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=93059468
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100694897
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=100694897
https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=112384583
work
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
September 2
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Class will discuss ideas of freedom and democracy
through the works of Walker and Truth
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ David Walker (pp. 159 – 171)
○ Sojourner Truth (pp. 176 – 180)
September 7
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and Introduction to the Great
Negro Migration
Read:
● “Parable of the Sower” by Octavia Butler,
Chapter 2024 (pp. 1-21)
September 10
● Voice Thread 2 -
Butler
September 12
● Quiz 3 -
Readings in
Anthology
through Sept 11thSeptember 9
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and introduction to revolutionary
Read:
● The Confessions of Nat Turner
● “Parable of the Sower” by Octavia Butler,
Chapter 2025 (pp. 23-79)
September 14
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and discussion on folktales and
Black storytelling
Read:
● “Parable of the Sower” by Octavia Butler,
Chapter 2026 (pp. 81-119)
● Norton Anthology
○ Charles Chesnutt (pp. 580 – 618)
September 17
● Voice Thread 3 -
September 19
● Quiz 3 -
Chesnutt,
Dunbar, and
Washington
September 16
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and introduction to ideas of the
“mask” and the birth of Black conservatism
Read:
● “Parable of the Sower” by Octavia Butler,
Chapter 2027 (pp. 121-261)
● Norton Anthology
○ Paul Laurence Dunbar (pp. 894–916)
○ Booker T. Washington (pp. 548–550,
572–579)
http://users.wfu.edu/zulick/340/natturner.html
work
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
September 21
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and Black radicalism
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ W.E.B. DuBois (pp. 679–702)
September 24
● VoiceThread 4 -
Johnson
September 26
● Quiz 4 - Johnson
and Novel, The
Autobiography of
an Ex-Colored
Man
September 23
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and discussion of Black
“passing” and its implications
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored
Man by James Weldon Johnson (pp.
780–783, 792–871)
September 28
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to the Harlem Renaissance
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Introduction to Harlem Renaissance (pp.
929–944)
October 1
● Voice Thread 5 -
the Harlem
Renaissance
September 30
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Continue discussion of Harlem Renaissance and
the works of Hughes as the Godfather of spoken
word poetry
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Langston Hughes (pp. 1302–1324)
October 5
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to Black research modalities:
ethnography
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Zora Neale Hurston (pp. 1029–1079)
○ “Spunk”
October 8
● VoiceThread 5 -
Harlem
Renaissance,
Hughes, and
Hurston
October 10
● Quiz 6 - Hughes
and Hurston
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5131/
work
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
October 7
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to “Cane” and its new depiction of the
rural south
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Jean Toomer (pp. 1141–1170)
October 12
(NO CLASS)
Office Hours today for assistance with A/V Mix or
Author Discussion Presentations. Midterm Exam
VoiceThread Available today
October 17
● Midterm Voice
Thread
October 14
(NO CLASS)
Office Hours
October 19
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Discuss Midterm Exam. Author Discussions
continue today. Intro to Jean Toomer, passing and
the critique of African American artistic creativity
(DuBois and Locke)
Read:
● “Criteria of Negro Art” by W.E.B. DuBois
● “The New Negro” by Alain Locke
N/A
October 21
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions continue today. Discussion of
protest literature
Read:
● Norton Anthology (Volume 2)
○ Richard Wright (pp. 119-132)
● “Bright and Morning Star” Note: Click on
“Entire Issue” at the top middle of the page
to read the story
October 26
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Author Discussions and introduction to Ann Petry,
James Baldwin, and Black Arts Movement
Read:
● Ann Petry
● Norton Anthology
○ The Black Arts Era (pp. 533–561)
○ James Baldwin (pp. 390 – 394, 413 –
435, 453 - 465)
October 30
● Voice Thread 6 -
Baldwin, Petry,
and Black Arts
Era
http://www.webdubois.org/dbCriteriaNArt.html
http://literarymovementsmanifesto.wordpress.com/more/alain-locke-the-new-negro-1925/
http://bit.ly/1JJ7T6R
https://www.evernote.com/shard/s1/sh/6bdacd10-6994-44c5-ac24-f570e4787bb6/b6cb01764fd3deafb5fdf7fd0ee9ef03
work
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
October 28
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to Black nationalism
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Malcolm X (pp. 565 – 587)
November 2
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Discussion of the modern day Civil Rights
Movement
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Martin Luther King (pp. 592 – 607)
November 5
● Voice Thread 7 -
Malcom X and
Martin Luther
King.
November 4
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Continuation of the Black Arts Movement.
Discussion on poetry as advocacy
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Audre Lorde (pp. 637 – 652)
○ Amiri Baraka (pp. 660 – 665, 674 – 688)
November 9
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduce Black Feminism
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Sonia Sanchez (pp. 708 – 725)
○ Nikki Giovanni (pp. 879 – 886)
Notes:
If you submit your Reflective Writing Essay by or
before November 14th, you will have an opportunity
to receive feedback and if necessary, re-write your
essay for early submission of November 21st or the
regular submission due date of November 28th.
Submitting your Final Draft by the early submission
date (November 21st), will earn 5 points extra credit
applied to this essay. Contact your grader directly if
you choose to submit your Reflective Writing Essay
early, otherwise, she or he will not know it is there).
November 12
● Voice Thread 8 -
Lorde, Baraka,
Sanchez, and
Giovanni
work
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
November 11
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Discussion of Walker, the “Color Purple,” and
Womanism
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Alice Walker (pp. 1176 – 1205)
November 16
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to Ntozake Shange and “For Colored
Girls” and choreopoems
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Ntozake Shange (pp. 1290 – 1296)
November 28
● Intellectual A/V
Mix (Submit by
November 21 for
extra credit - you
must notify your
grader if you
decide to do so)
November 18
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Discussion of Maya Angelou’s work as an example
of personal narratives demonstrating larger cultural
themes
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Maya Angelou (pp. 944 – 957)
November 30
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to “narrative shifting” and centering
“othered” characters.
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Toni Morrison (pp. 985 - 1067)
December 3
● VoiceThread 9 -
Walker, Shange,
and Angelou
December 2
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Introduction to Black Speculative Fiction
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Octavia Butler, Bloodchild (pp. 1251 –
1266)
December 7
(LIVE Spatial)
Class:
Discussion on what it means to be “American” and
ideas of citizenship
Read:
● Norton Anthology
○ Jamaica Kincaid (pp. 1304 – 1314)
○ Barack Obama (pp. 1409 – 1419)
December 9
● Complete the
End-of-Course
Evaluation for
extra credit!
work
Course Schedule
AFAS 160 - Fall 2021
Class:
Class wrap-up!
Notes:
Your Intellectual A/V Mix Project and your Reflective
Writing Exercise were your Final Exam. Good Luck
on the rest of your Final Exams. Thank you for
taking this course. Consider Majoring/Minoring in
Africana Studies and going to Paris next Spring
2022 with my AFAS 421/497P Class!
Also, those who took this class via Spatial, please
send feedback on the experience.
work
l
;
Talking ·Book~ ,
• l . •-; >
·r •, I .
\
The lesson to be drawn from this cu,tso.ry glance at wh il t I may
. call the past , present and futur ~ of ou r Race Literature apart
from its value as first begfrmings, not only tci us· as a p eople biit
· literaturein genei-al, j s that :unless earnest and systematic-effort
be mad.e to procur~. p. nd preser(e; for transmissiop .to our succe~-
sors, the records, bcioks and various publications already pro_-
ciuced by u.s, not on°Jy will the stu rdy pi,oneers who p~ved the way
andlaid the fo lindation for ourRace Literatu re be-robbed of their
just due ; but an irretrievable wrong will be inflicted upon the·
generations that shall come ilfte~ us., . , . ) ·
. . -;-:VICfORIA E ~ RLE MATTHEWS, ) 895
In the history of .the worlds· great literatures, few traditions have origins· as
curious as that created by African-slaves ·and ex-slaves,writing in the English
language ih the third quarter of the eighteenth century. In the ·stubbornly
durable hist0ry of human slavery, · it: was only-the black slaves in England
and the United, States who:created; a genre- of literature that, at once, testi-
fied •against their .captors and bore vvitness to the urge •to ·be free · and liter-
ate, -to embrace the European . Enlightenments dream of reason and the
American Enlightehments dream of civil liberty, wedded together glori-
ously ,in a great republic 0 of letters . ·)
·. For what could be more peculiar to the institution of human slavery t han
liberal learning, than the arts and sciences, as the French philosophes .put
it? Slavery, ,as Lucius ·C ., Matlock argued in 1845 in a review of Frederick
Douglasss now classic Narrative ,of the Life, naturally and necessarily: is
·the enemy of literattire .l! 1Despite ·that antagonistic, relation, Matlock con-
tinued, slavery had by the middle• of ;the nineteenth century become- the
prolific theme of ;much that is profound in argument, ·sublime in poetry,
and thrilling 1in narrative. -Whats more, he concluded with as much aston-
ishment as ·satisfaction, the soil of1slavery itself-and the demands for its
abolition-had·tur.ned ·out>:to ,be an ironically fertile ground fo t the creation
of. a,new literature, a literature indicting oppression, a literature created by
the oppressed: FroQI the soil 6f slavery itself have sprung forth some of the
most ·brilliant productions, whose logical levers will ultimately upheave ,and
overthrow -the system .. It. will be frorri the pen of self-eni.anoipated slaves,
Matlock predicted, that startling incidents authenticated, far excelling fic-
tion in their touching pathos , will secure the execrations of all good men
and · become a monument more enduring than marble, in testimony strong
as sacred-wit ....
XX XV
xxxvl INTRODUCTION
African American slaves, remarkably, sought to write themselves 0
slavery by mastering the Anglo-American bellettristic tradition. rts;f
that _they did ~o against the greatest ~dds. does not beg~n to suggest th~
heroic proportions that the task of reg1stermg a black voice in printed I _
ters entailed. James Albert _UkawsaWi Gr;o_nn,i?saw, the author of the fi;:t
full-length black autobiography, A narrative of the most r,emarkahle par-
ticulars in the life of James Albert Vkawsaw .Gronniosaw, an African Prince
(1770), and the source of the genre of the slave narrative, accounted for
this animosity, as well as the slaves anxiety before it, in the trope of the
talking book:
[My Master] used to read prayers in public to the ships crew every Sab-
bath day; and then I saw him read. I was never .so surprised in my life
as when I Sa\V the . book tal~ to my master, for I thoug~t it did as i
observed him to looJ<, ,upon it, and mo:ve h,i~ lips. I ;w,ished it would do so
with me. As soon as my master had done r-eading, I followed him to the
place where ·he put the book, being · mightily delighted with it, and
when nobody Sa\,\/ .111e, I opened fr, a~d put inf ei;ir down cl9se upon it,
in great, hope.s that it. would say sometning to me; but I ,was sorry, and
greatly ·disappointed, when I found that it would ·not . speak. This
thought immediateJy presented itself to me, that every body and every
thing despi~ed me because r was black.
The text . of • Western letters .refused . to speak to the -person of African
descent; paradoxically, ;we read about that refusal in a text created -by that
very person of African-descent. In a very ,real sense, the.Angld-African liter,
ary tradition was created tw~ centuries ago in order to :demonsfrate that
persons of African -desc_ent possessed ·the requisite degrees of reason and
wit to create literature, that they were, indeed,, full a11,d equal mem~ers of
the community of rational, sentient beings, tha~ -they could, indeed, .write.
With Gronniosaws An African Prince; .a distinctively tAfri~an :voice· regis-
tered its presence in the republic of letters; it was_, a i te~t that both talked
black, and, through its unrelenting indictment .of the · institution of slav-
ery, talked bac~. , , ·. . , - i , 1 ·
Making the text, speak ·in the full range,. of. timbres · that the African
enslaved in England and America brought to the process of writing be<::arrie
the dominant urge of the•ex-slave authors. So compelling did Gronniosaws
trbpe of the talking book-prove to be that, between 17.70 and 1815, no fe~er
than five authors of. slave narratives used the same metaphor as a crucial
scene of instruction to dramatize the authors own road to· lite~acy, initially,
and to authorship, :ultimately. John Marrant in 1785,, Cugoano in 1787,
Equiano in -1789, and John Jea in , 1815-all :modified Gi:onniosaws figur_e
of the talking book as the signal structural element .of their autobiograph1•
cal narratives, thereby providing the formal Hnks ofrepetition and .revision
that, in pa~t, define any literary tradition, So related,, in theme and structure,
were these texts that by 1790 -yronniosaws ·Dublin publis~er also include~
John Marrants Narrative on his list and advertised its-sale on .GronniosaW 5
endpapers . · , ,
Still, the resistance even to the idea that an African could create litera·
ture was surprisingly resilient. As early as 1680, Morgan Godwyn; the self-
INTRODUCTION I . xxxvll
described Negro and Indians Advocate/ had accounted for the resistance
in this way:
[a] disingenuous and unmanly Position had been formed; and privately (as
it were in the dark) handed to and again, which is th,is, That t~e Negros
though in their Figure they carry some resemblances
1
of manhood, ye.t,,~re
inde~q not. men .. ·} ,he. <\qnsi,der,ation of the shape and figure of OU~
Negros Bodies, their U:~bs and memb~rs; ,their Voice and. Countenanc~1
in all things ,according ~th.other mens; together with their Risi_bility and
Discourse (mans peculiar Faculties) should be sufficient Conyiction.
How. s}:iould they otherwis~ be capable of Trades·; and otp~r ~o less
manly imployments; as also ~f Readiiig and Writjng, or ,show so mu~h
Discretion in management of Business; .. . but wherein lWe know) that
many of our People are deficient, were they not truly Men? ·
Godwyns account of the claims thatAJrican~ were not hum~n beings and
his ·use of the poss~sslon· of reas~n and its manifestations_ through Reading
and Writing to refute these claims were widely debated during the Enlight-
enment, generally at the Africans expense: . ..
The putative relation bet~e~n litera~y and th/ quest fo~ freedom pro-
vided the subtext for this large{ d~liate over lh~ Africans place in nature,
his or her place· in the great chain of being. Following the Ston6 Rebellion
ofl739 in South Carolina, the largest uprising of slaves in the colonies
before the American Revolution, legislators there 1e·nacted a d~aconi~n hody
of p~blic laws, ~aking two forms of litJ~acy pui-iish~ble bylaw: the mastery
of w~itipg, and the masterr, ofthe ,dri.ui-1..Th~ _Ia~ ~~ainst )earning to write
read as follows: ·
And whereas the having of slaves taughtto write, or suffering them to be
-employed in writing, may be attendfng with great inconveniences; Be
it enacted, that all .and every, person and· persons whatsoever, who shall
hereafter teach, or cause any slave or· islaves to • be taught· to . write, or
shall use or employ any slave as a scribe in any manner of writing what-
soever, hereafter taught to write; eyery such person or persons shall, for
every offense, forfeit the sum of one hundred pounds <;urrent money.
The law against the use of the talking dr1;1m was just as strong:
.And for that.as it is absolutely necessary to the safety of this Province,
• that all, due care be taken to restrain the wanderings and meetings of
negroes and other slaves, at all times , and more especially on Saturday
nights, Sundays and o~her holidays, and their ;using and carrying. wooden
swords, and other ,mischievous and ·dangerous ;weapons, or using or
keeping of drums, horns, or other loud instruments, which may call
together or, give sign or notice to one •another- of, their wicked designs
and purposes .. , . And whatsoever master,·owner.or overseer,shall per-
mit or suffer his or their negro or other slave or slaves, at any time here-
after, or beat drums, blow horns, or use any ci~her loud -instruments, or
whosoever shall suffer and countenance any, .public meetings or seat-
ings or strange negroes or slaves in their plantations, shall forfeit I 0
current money, for every such offence.
xu vlll IN TRODU C T I ON
1 n the ~w ,w Hcbclllon, both formM of li tcrucy- :,f En~Ji~h lcti.:,. and of tiJt
11 ·I v •rnundur- hud been pivotal to the islavc II C.1J p m:1 t y tJJ rebel.
)11 C( l .I, h J J• .. f..
Writing, muny phll ()1wph cr:, argu~u ,n t c .;., n 1,.,,,t,c2mc_nt ,
1
~t,1od c1lonc
1. 101111 the fin e urt H 1H1 th e mo,; t ,w l, cn t rcpm,,tory ol gcn,w,1 the vi~if,l=
II I ,., I J I h . , I sign of reason ii sel f. In tlrl s :, u wr ,n alc ro c, . owcv~r, writ1
1
ng, c1 thou~
secon da ry lo rca:wn, wa ll neverth ~Jc1111 t~c medium of r~ason ,. cxprcs~ion.
We know rcu son l,y Hs rcprcsc nLi.JllOn !i. Suc.: h rcprcscntat,om, could as~umt
spoken or wr itten form . Eightecn l~ ~ccnlury European _writ.c:s ~rivilegca
wrUing~ in th elr wr ilin gs about A ~ri cam, _al least- as the pn_nc,pal mea-
sure of th e African s hum anity, th e ir capacit y for progrcc,s, their very pl~
in th e grea t chain of being. As th e Scottish philosopher Da vid Hume put it
in u footnote to the second edition of hi~ widely read essay Of National
Chara cters:
I am apt to suspec t the negroes, and in general all the other species of
me n (for there are four or five different kind s) to he naturalJy inferior to
the whites. There never was a civilized nation of any other complex-
ion than white, nor eve n any indi vidu al eminent either in action or
speculation. No ingenious ma nu facturers amongst them, n o arts, no
sciences. On the other hand , th e most rude and barbarous of the
whites, such as the ancient Germans, the present Tartars, have still
something eminent ab~ut them , in their va lour, fo rm o f government,
or some other particular.
Such a uniform and constant difference could not happen, in so
many countries and ages, if nature had not made an original distinc-
tion betwixt these breeds of men. Not to mention our colonies, there are
negro slaves dispersed all over Europe, of which none ever discm·ered
any symptoms of ingenuity; tho low p eople, without education, iJI
start up amongst us , and distinguish themsel ves in every profession. In
Jamaica indeed they talk of one negro as a man of parts and learning
[Francis Williams] ; but tis likely he is ad mired for every slender accom -
plishment, like a parrot, who speaks a few words plainly.
Immanuel Kant, the German philosopher, responding to Humes essay a
decade later, had this to say:
The negroes of Africa have by nature no feeling that rises aboYe the
trifling. Mr. Hume challenges anyone to cite a single e.~mple in which
a Negro has shown talents , and asserts th at among the hundreds of
thousands of blacks who are transported elsewhere from the countries.
al
th
ough many of them have been set free , still not a single one~rns e,·er
found who presented th· · · th . any mg great m art or science or anv o er praise-worthy quality h h - ·. all ·
. , even t oug among the whnes some cont.mu nse aloft from the lo t bbl
· h Id S wes ra e, and through superior gifts earn respecl 1
~ t e word .. 0 fundamental is the difference between these two races
o ma n, an It appears to b . . . .
color. The reli ion of~ . e as grea_t m regard to mentaJ capac1t.Jes as in
sort of idolatrvgth . ttshes so w.de-spread a mong them is perhaps a
si bl e to huma;, nc~tL.s:;
1
s a~ deepl y mt o the trifling as a ppears to be pos-
other common b · A bi rd feat h er, a cow horn, a conch shell, or a~·
is an ob,iect f ,
0
~ect . as soo n as it becom es consecrated bv a few words.
J · o , enerat1 0 <l f · ·
n a n o invoca tion in swea r ing oaths. The blacl-s
INTRODUCTION xxxlx
are very vain but in the Negro s way, a nd so talkative th a t they must be
driven apart from each other with thrashings . ·
Thomas Jefferson , in his Notes on the State of Virginia (1785) , echoed this
discourse in his disparaging remarks about Phillis Whea tleys book of poems:
Misery is often the parent of the most affecting touches in poetry.
Among the blacks is misery e nough , God knows, but not poetry. Love is
the peculiar oestrum of th e poet. Their love is a rde nt, but it kindles the
senses only, not the imagination. Religion , indeed, has produced a
Phillis Wheatley; but it could not produce a poet. The compositions
published under her name a re below the dignity of criticism.
To test assertions such as these , various Europeans and Americans edu-
cated young black slaves along with their own children. El negro Juan
Latino, who published three books of poetry in Latin between 1573 and
1585, w as one of the earliest examples 6f such an experiment, followed by
Wilhelm Amo, Jacobus Capitein , and Francis Williams·, in the first quarter of
the eighteenth century. The first black person to publish a book of poetry in
English , Phillis Wheatley, was also the subject of such an experiment. But
whether Wheatley had the capacity to write, herself, poems of such accom-
plishment, was a matter of considerable controversy in Boston in 1773.
And it was a matter of controversy a nd of immediate concern to her master
and mistress, John and Susannah Wheatley, because the publication of their
slaves book was dependent upon establishing the authenticity of their
slaves authorship, the fact that she had written her poems herself. How
could they prove that? Well, sometime in 1772 or 1773, through a proce-
dure the nature of which scholars have yet to discover, the Wheatleys per-
suaded a group of Bostons m0st august citizens-the most respectable
characters in Boston, as they would later be described , no less than eigh-
teen of them-to read Phillis Wheatleys manuscript and then, somehow,
to examine her about the poems in that manuscript. Whether or not they
did so collectively, in a trial setting (as a filmmaker might conceive it), or
whether they did so individually (which seems unlikely, given the time that
eighteen separate interviews or examinations would entail), we do not
know. Among them were John Erving, a prominent Boston merchant; the
Reverend Charles Chauncey, pastor of the Tenth Congregational Church ;
and John Hancock, who would later gain fame for his signature on the Dec-
laration of Independence. At the center of this group would have sat His
Excellency, Thomas Hutchinson, governor of the colony, with Andrew Oli-
ver, his lieutenant governor, close by his side.
We can only speculate on the nature of the questions posed , either col-
lectively or individually, to the fledgling poet. Perhaps they asked her to
identify ancl explain-for all to hear-exactly who were the Greek and
Latin gods and poets alluded to so frequently in her work. Perhaps they
asked her to conjugate a verb • in Latin , or even to translate randomly
selected passages from the Latin , which she and her master, John Wheat-
ley, claimed that she had made some progress in. Or perhaps they asked
her to recite from memory key passages from th e texts of John Milton and
Alexander Pope, the two poets by whom the African seems to have been
mos t directly influenced. We do not know.
xi INTRODUCTION
We do know, bowev.er, that the African poets responses were more than
sufficient to prompt these eighteen august gentlemen to compose, sign, and
publish a two-paragraph Attestation, an open letter To the Publick that
prefaces Phillis Wheatleys book, and which reads in part:
I
We whose Names are ~nder-written, do assure the World, that t.he
POEMS specified in the following Page, were (as we verily believe) writ-
ten by PHILLIS, a young Negro Girl, who was but a few Year·s since,
brought an uncultivated Barbarian from Africa, and has ever since
been, and now is under the Disadvantage of serving as a Slave in a
Family in this Town. She has been examined by some of the best
Judges, and is thought qualified to write them. ·
So important .was this document in securing a publisher for Phillis Wheat-
leys poems that it forms the signal element in the prefatory matter printed
in the opening pages of her Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral,
which was issued in London in the falI of 1773 because Boston printers
remained skeptical about her authorship and refused , to publish the book.
Without. the printed Attestation/ , Phillis Wheatleys publisher claimed,
few would have believed that an African could possibly have written -poetry
all by herself. As the eighteen put the matter clearly in their letter, Num-
bers would be ready to suspect they were not really the Writings of PHILLIS.
This curious anecdote, surely one of the oddest oral examinations on
record; is only a tiny. part of a larger, and even more curious, episode in, the
Enlightenment;. At least since the end of the seventeenth century, Europe-
ans -had wondered aloud whether or not the African ·species .of men, as
they 1:post commonlf put it, could ever create formal literature, could ever
master the ·arts and· sciences. If they could, the argument ran, then the
African variety of humanity and the _European variety were fundamentally
related. If not, then it ,seemed clear that the African was destined by nature
to be a slave, rightly relegated to a low place in the great chain, of being, an
ancient construct that arranged all of creation on a vertical scale ascending
from plants, insects, and animals through human beings to .the .angels and
God himself.
By 1750, the chain had become minutely calibrated; the . human scale
rose from the lowliest Hottentot .(black South African) to glorious Milton
and Newton. If blacks could write and publish imaginative literature, then
they could, in effect; take a few , giant steps up the chain of being; in a
pernicious metaphysical game of Mother, May I? For example, reviewers
of Wheatleys book argued that the publication .of her poems meant that the
African was indeed a human being and should not be enslaved. Indeed,
Wheatley herself was manumitted . soon after her poems were pu~l!shed.
That which was only implicit in Wheatleys case would become explicit fifty
. ·der-years later. George Moses Hor.ton had, by the mid 1820s, gamed~ cons• ull-
able reputation at Chapel Hill .as the· slave-poet. His master ~n~ted f a
page · advertisements in northern newspapers soliciting . subscriptions fo~
book of Hortons. poems and promising to exchange the slaves freedom 0 ;
a sufficient return on sales of the book. Writing, for these slaves, was no
·only an activity of mind; it was also a commodity that gained them access to
their full humanity-Horton literally bought freedom with his poems.
INTRODUCTION xii
Two hundred and twenty years separate the publication of Phillis Wheat-
ley s curious book of poems and Toni Morrisons receipt of the Nobel Prize
for literature in 1993. Morrisons success is part of a larger phenomenon .
African American literature has been enjoying a renaissance in quality and
quantity for the past several decades, .even vaster than the New Negro, or
Harlem, Renaissance of the 1920s, spurred on to a significant extent since
1970 by the writings of African American women such as Morrison , Alice
Walker, Maya Angelou, Rita Dove, Gloria Naylor, Jamaica Kincaid , and Terry
McMillan , among a host of others. The number of literary prizes won by
black authors in the last thirty years, including Pulitizer Prizes, National
and American Book Awards, far exceeds the total number of such honors
won by African Americans during the previous hunqred years. And several
times since 1990, as many as three or four black authors have appeared
simultaneously on the best-seller list of the New York Times. While the
audience for this magnificent flowering of black literature crosses all racial
boundaries, black readers have never been more numerous: as early as June
1996 the Times reported that African Americans were purchasing 160 mil-
lion books a year; a decade and a half later, that figure has dramatically
increased.
This prominence in the marketplace has had its counterpart in the cur-
riculum. Black literature courses have become a central part of the offerings
in Engfish departments and in departments of American studies , African
American studies, and womens studies. Maya Angelous delivery of On the
Pulse of Morning at President Bill Clintons inauguration in 1993 (she was
the first poet to read at an inauguration since Robert Frost did so for John
F. Kennedy in 1961), Elizabeth Alexanders delivery of Praise Song for the
Day at President Barack Obamas first inaugµration in 2009, and Rita
Doves unprecedented two-term appointment as Poet Laureate of the
United States are further signs of the pervasive presence of African Ameri-
can literature in American society. The globalization of hip hoj:>, the domi:
mnt form of American popular music for the past three decades , has not
only spawned a Spoken Word movement (a much larger postmodern ver-
sion of poetry readings by the Beats in coffeehouses on the 1950s) and the
citation of classical black poetry (and the sampling of canonical soul and
rhythm and blues lyrics from the 1960s and 1970s in marvelous examples
of intertextuality), but also has contributed to a renaissance in African
American poetry, which we shall address at the end of this essay.
This broad acceptance of the authority of African American writing was,
of course, not always the case. Leonard Deutsch, a professor of English at
Marshall University, recalls the harsh resistance that greeted his request to
write a Ph.D. dissertation on Ralph Ellison at Kent State University in
1970. When his prospectus was approved, a member of his thesis commit-
tee-a well-known Mdville scholar-;---resigned in protest, arguing that
To write this dissertation is bad on two counts: for Len Deutsch him-
self, and subsequently for the university. A doctoral dissertation implies
substance, we_ight (stuffiness ·often accompanying this), and spread,
and not concentration upon the wings of a gnat. If it be concentration,
the dissertation must by concentration bring together and sum-up worlds
of thought and material-the dissertation as metonymy or synecdoche ,
xi I I I NTRODUOTION
which it generally is , One coul~, _for !_nsta~ce,_ w~ite about Hemingway,
Faulkner, ·or Bellow (recently, hvmg or still k1ckmg) ·because .men like
them ha:e established a respectable an.d accepted corpus of work rang,
ing sufficiently to call for comment. .· · , · · , · ,.
Emso~s wor~, he conclud.ed, was ofthe ·.st
0
ature _to ~~ ria,n_~ beiryg, itud-
ied for ,a f>h.q. ii/ English. Other_ stories 1of w~it~ pr?f~ .. ss~r-~ ,;mq Pfedi;i~i~
nantly white instit4tio_n,s of ~~gher edu<;:~t10~ d1~c.°-ur_ag~n~ .scholarly
inte.rests an~ careers in Afi!c~p , American literat1,1,re abo_1.p;i d _in _ acaderni,c
folklore. . . · . ; , , . , , . . , .· ,
The resistance to the lit¢rary meri.ts _of black literature, as we have .see~
has its origins in the, Ei:i,li,gh!~nment , a~d in tpe pecul~a~ instit1!~1on of
ery. The so1;ja, an~ politi_ca~~ ,us,es to ~hich t~is literature h11s been put haV:~
placed a trew.endo~s burden 0I).• the_s~ w,riters,_ cast~n& aQ author and her or
his works i.n , i:,li~ ,rok.~f i ynec9oche, a part standing for .th,e et~ni~ w.h9i~,
signifyfog ~h~ -,:~h~ N~gro ~as,, w~9, t pis or _h~r i~her~nt intellec;!4a)
poten,tial, might be, _and whether _or not, tqe . larger group w~s ~q,titled to ·the
full ran,ge of rights and resporisibiJities jof Arperican citizensh.ip. B~cause ~f
the perilous stature of African Americans in American so~iety, their liter~~
ture has suffered u.nd~r Jremendous e~~ral!terary burdens. . , · ,.
Writing in the Pref~ce to An Antho{pgy of American Negro Literature
(1929), V. F. Caly~~Joi{, _:a 1\Jrrxist critic;, argued that black litr r~~u~e --~~s
primarily a reflection of th~ Negros h~stor ica] economic exploitation,:
In a subtle way,- Negro art and litera ture in Amedca have had an eco-
nomic origin. All · that is original iri ! Negro folk~lote, · or singular ·fn
Negro spirituals and Eli.Jes, , can- be·trace d to the economic institution
of slavery i1nd its infltierice upon the · Negro soul. · 1
< • • ). ·.,•. •
Richard Wright w<;mld. e<;ho th~se sen.t,iments in his Bluepril)t for Negro
Writing, pµblished in 1,9,37. Calver.ton went ~n to argue that the Neg~os
music and folk art were never purely imitative, and tqat .black vernacular
cultural: forms were definitely. and unequivocally American, . th~ only qrig-
inal Amer.ican culture. y,et cre,ated. \i\Trjght, too,. would repeat this claim. Ji
~lack writ~rs turned to t~e~r own vern,acula,r .tr.~di~ions, he concl~dtq, bl:
1
t
literature ~ould he as ongmal and as cpmpellmg as _black music an? ( o~-
lpre. The lite~a~y m?vement of the , 1920s, he maintained, _was mort; 1~~he
tant for what it implied ahqu( what.;hi~torian Carter G. Woo4son:c.alledf h
public Negro mind th~IJ. for ·w.hat , it, had contributed. to the qmon ° t e
worlds great literatures: .·, , . , . . ·
.• t·•.; . • -
f . . , . > , stitute a I this new literature of the Negt o in America does not cop itis
· • : d , · • · 1 1, · d culture, -renaissance, It oes signify rapid growth ih racia art an . · tes a
· a g th th · · · · · · · it illustra row at is as yet unfinished. Indeed we may say · , than
g rowth th t. d , .r ,, , . ·l• ,. b . , It. d1·cates more a m a ynamxt sense has just egun. m
the rise of a literature. It marks the rise of. an .entire people. .
. d the nse
. Calvert~ns argument ~~out_ .t~e pr~dt ctjo:n of lite~ary arts ~n, oet Jarn~s
of an entire people ech_o,ed . t_he eloquert argument that th~;J of Amert·
W(.ldon Johnson h~d qiade in his . important antholo~r, T_~e ~f the· Harle:
can Negro Poetry, published in 1922 at the very beg~nnmg .. · I essays 0
Renai J h · , · · · r cnuca ssance. 0 nsons preface remains one of the maJ0
INTRODUCTION xlill
the nature and function of black literature. In it Johnson states explicitly
what had been implicit in the critical reception of black …
Hello everyone and welcome to our midterm exam voice thread throughout the semester we’ve been reading about and discussing ways in which African-Americans have used literature and other creative meetings to rebel against the established power structures that were and in some cases still are firmly entrenched here in the US. Now at times as you’ve now realized it appeared that African-Americans were completely excepting the status quo and at other times it was violently evident that some have had enough and were willing to fight back even if it meant their death literally or figuratively.
1. Now from the work that we read up to this point I would like for you to select any two and discuss in detail how you understand or see elements of either open or covert rebellion against the established power structure. Now I really need to be completed your thoughts essay or entire work assigned for class but also your own ideas of rebellion found within that piece.
2. The second part of this exam asks that you select any two of your favorite authors who’s worked so far I’d like for you to describe for me why you consider him or her among your favorites and to include what aspect of his or her work your attention I’m looking for you to be detailed enough to demonstrate to me that you not only read the work by the author you chose but also that you can intelligently describe what it was about his or her work that you liked surface level descriptions with little or no detail will receive few if any points.
(please talk about Jean Toomer and his work Cane)
1 l
• 1
-~ f \
,. , i I •
I n African American literature, .the vernacular refers to the church songs, blues, ballads, sermons, stories, m~ and, .in our own era, hip-hop songs that are part of
the oral, not primarily the literate (or written-down)
tradition of black expr~ssion. What dis.tinguishes this
body of wo.rk is its in-group and, at times, secretive,
defe_nsive,. and aggressive ·character: it is not, generally
speaking,. produced for. circulation beyond .the black
group · itself -(though it sometimes is bought · and sold
by those outside its circle). This highly charged mate-
rial. has been extraordinar,ily influential for writers
of poetry, fiction, drama, and so on. What would the
·work of. Langston Hughes, Sterling A. Brown, Zora
Neale Hurston, -and Toni Morrison be like_ without its
black verIJ.acular ingredients? What, for that- matter,
would the ~riting of Mark Twa.in or William Faulkner
be without these same elements? Still, this vernacular
, ·material also has its own shapes, its own integrity, its
own place. in the black literary canon: the literature of
the vernacular ..
Defining the vernacular and delineating it as a cat-
egory of African American literary studies have been
difficult and controversial projects. Some critics note
Avenue Steppets Marching Club, 1982·. Black New Orleans
features parades at Mardi Gras and throughout the year-for
other holjdays, fun~rals, an~ ~any occasioi;is. The styli;zed music
and dan~e steps characteristic of the parades have helped cJefine
New Orleans culture and bind its community. Th~se stre~~
forms offer a continuing source of inspiration for artists across
the categories·: liter~ry, vi~u-;.l, and otherwis~. Photography by
Michael P. Smith© The Historic New Orleans Collection.
Throughout this section, titles followed by• are available on the StudySpace
website ·
I
4
TH E VE RN AC U LA R T RA D I TI O N , PA RT 2
th vernaculars typical demarcation as a category of things that e d h . . are
attached only to lower-class groups, ~n ot erw1se simplistically ex r ll1ale,
of a vast and complexly layered and dispersed group of people. 0th P essive
both against the sentimentalization of a stereotyped folk and the:S.,warll
d against the impulse to define black people and their literature I Iore an . f . b h . so el . terms of the product10n o unconsc10us ut some ow definitive Wo k } II)
the bottom of the social ~ierarchy. ~ith these critiques often corn: /;011i
ings against forming too easy an idea about the shape and direction f rtt.
· h M h · · h
O Afr can American literary 1story. ost emp atic 1s t e argument ag . , ,.
modernist view that would posit an almost sacred set of found:tst a
vernacular texts by black and unknown bards (to borrow James W~~:al
Johnsons ringing phrase) leading to ever more complex works by higher ll
higher artists marching into the future. Is contemporary music really rn and
. 1 h h k f B · S · h R b ore progressive or comp ex t an t e wor o ess1e m1t , q ert Johnson
or Louis Armstrong? ,,
And yet even after these questions and criticisms have been raised
somehow such distinctive forms as church songs, blues, talI tales, work
songs, games, jokes, dbzens, and rap songs-along with myriad other such
forms, past and present-· persist among African Americans, as .they have
for decades. They are, as a Langston Hughes· poem announces, still here.
Indeed, the vernacular is not a body of quaint, folksy items. It is not an
exclusive male province. Nor is it associated with a particular level of.society
or with a particular historical era. It is neither long ago, far away; nor fading.
Instead, the vernacular- encompasses vigorous, dynamic processes of expres-
sion, past and present. It makes up a rich storehouse of materials wherein
the values, styles, and character, types of black American life are reflectea in
language that is highly energized and often marvelously eloquent.
Ralph Ellison and Toni Morrison ·have argued that vernacular art
accounts, to a large degree, for the black Americans legacy of self-awareness
and endurance. For black performers and :listeners (as well as readers) it has
often served the classic function of teaching as it delights. Refusing to sub-
scribe wholly io the white Americans ethos andworldview, African Amer·
icans expressed in these vernacular forms their own ways of seeing the
world, its history, and its meanings. The vernacular comprises, Ellison said,
nothing less than another instance of humanitys triumph over chaos. In
it experiences of the past are remembered ·and evaluated; through it African
Americans attempt to humanize aff often harsh world, and to do so with
honesty, with toughness, and often with humor.
VERNACULAR IN THE MODERN AND CONTEMPORARY
PERIODS: A BRIEF HISTORY
From the first stirrings of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1940s through
the first decade of the twenty-first century the lived experience of black
A · · f of mencans creatmg freshly innovated art has continued to be a act
~mfrican cu!tural l~fe . In particul~r, . black Americans have produced
tidal wave of mnovative black v~I_nacula_i- expression: new forms sacred an,
5
secular, ~cross the categories of art. Perhaps the philosopher Cornel West
formu~atwn best expl~ins this phenomenon of spurting black creativity: h:
has said that as black creative output is adopted bought , and sold by th
broader community, the blacks themselves have been forced to come up
-------- --------
INTRODUCTION 5
Jazz singer Billie Holiday often performed the anti-lynching song Strange Fruit at
New Yorks Cafe Society, one of the countrys first major interracial night clubs . This
poem set to music was part of a continuum of black protest songs-What Did I Do (to Be
So Black and Blue) and Miss Otis Regrets among them-that became popular with
American audiences.
with another-and then yet another-something new of their own. Perhaps
the zealousness of the search for identity, direction, and freedom in a still-
hostile native land explains something about the black Americans energies
for ever-dawning new directions in personal/communal ·expression.
Whatever black Americans motives for creativity have been, their imag-
ery, sounds, and products have traveled very well. In 2013, the French
anthropologist Alexandre Pierrepont reported that year after year in his
large freshman music history classes in Paris, more than 80 percent of the
students when asked what music they listened to at home routinely selected
a black American music (or one directly shaped by it) as their favorite. It is
not an exaggeration to say that by the end of the twentieth century, black
American culture had become the most popular youth culture in the world.
At mid-twentieth century, rhythm-and-blues (much of it gospel-based)
was circling the globe, and new forms of jazz were emerging. By the 1980s,
jazz had become a widely accepted concert music , studied and taught-
sometimes in interdisciplinary courses in jazz studies-all over the United
States as well as overseas. Jazz dances (and their various blends) were filling
the concert theaters and public dance halls (as well as private party spaces)
of the world. Brewing in the last quarter of the twentieth century, and con-
tinuing to claim new listeners on a worldwide scale have been hip-hop
6 THE VERNACULAR TRADITION. PART 2
music and culture, whose Bronx-born rhythms may now be heard in Hon
Kong, Stockholm, Johannesburg, Berlin, and Lima. As the America!
economy, and indeed most of the worlds economies, faltered in the early
twenty-first century-and then as these economies attempted a gradual
crawl back to stability in the 2010s-markets at home and abroad contin-
ued to use blues, jazz; and hip-hop to sell their wares.
Of course sheer quality accounts for much of this story of success-the
mysteriously persistent allure of the beautiful U.S. black vernacular. But
who can doubt that the black Americans placement in the hydra-headed
economy of the United States, where the hunger for new products is pri-
mary and where the capacity to market, package, and deliver them on a
worldwide scale has increased with the decades, has also played its eager
part? Some of this is a matter of hardware and software. The rising
array of new technologies has rendered black creative productions of all
sorts, in music and word art as well as in dance and the visual arts, more
widely and quickly available than ever before-far beyond black communi-
ties themselves. The perfection of the microphone, of speakers large and
small, and of ever-more-precise recording devices, audio and video; the
rise of the LP and then the CD and then of other digital chips and delivery
systems; the prevalence of mini-computer and of social media technologies-
all these have made it possible for art created by individuals or small
James Brown in 1962, photograph by Charles
Stewart. By many reports, Brown reigns as the
single most influential and widely sampled
musician in the world.
· groups to be potentially avail-
able to a worldwide audience,
and available in an instanta-
neous zip.
· With all this said, on the
level of the black community
itself, the engines of black
vernacular • creativity in the
modern and postmodern eras
have been amazingly robust.
Through the Civil Rights and
Black Arts Movement and
post-Black Arts Movement
years, black churches (Chris-
tian and Muslim) have con-
tinued to serve as fertile
training grounds for young
musicians, singers, and key-
boardists · in . particular,
though with horn players and
percussionists also frequently
in the mix. As early as the
late 1940s, the influence of
blues and jazz on , church
music was evident. In turn,
by the 1950s the influence of
gospel on jazz was creating
new dimensions of soul
jazz-sometimes with musi-
cal strw::tures and modes of
INTRODUCTION 7
presentation springing, straight. out of church. The hard bop. jazz group The
Jazz) Messenger: was. ?ne ~f many , outstanding groups playing jazz from a
gospel foundat10n. L1kew1se, the mid-twentieth centurys rising tide of
rhythm~and-blues could thank gospel for much of its sustained appeal.
James Brown began his career as a church singer in Toccoa, :Georgia. Even
Motown, with its . push to reach audiences beyond the black community,
typically hired y:oung singers first kno~n to church congregations in Detroit
or the Deep South . .Ironically, all ,the singers .in the hit Motown group The
Temptations began ~s church vocalists. Sacred spaces, .with their long t:r:a-
dition of vivid projections of The .Word, have also nurtured ,.secular black
styles of spoken-word presentation-right up to our ·own hip-hop .era .
. Worldwide jazz festivals during this , period frequently featur:ed promi-
nent -gospel stages ; where wjde arrays of ,church-born projects w,ere to ,be
heard. In 2003, one highly significant ja7:z singer, Dianne Reeves, reported
she. spent. her entire time at the New Orleans Jazz Fest under the :gospel
tent. Thats-wher.e,you hear• the most, innovative vocal music, she said. In
the l 990s:one .began to :see more and more churches experimenting with
new technological equipment-,-with recorded music sometimes filling in
for instrumental and vocal backgrounds and with large screens showing
congregations words of songs and close:ups of presenters. And just as hip-
hop rhyme virtuosos were influenced .by word artists in the church pulpits
of. the United States, . preachers a:nd , choirs in turn · were increasingly:
experimenting with · hip-hop ·staccato rhyme.s; rhythms, , arid ·flow. Indeed,
the .rapid and ·vigorous cycling of influences, _sacred and· secular, folk and
not folk, across, the decades and ey·en the centm:ies, may be the most
crucial.aspect of the U.S. black vernacular·story . . ,· .
Qf course jazz festivals, the first of which .appeared .in the early 1950s,
also featur~d -jazz. By the 1960s and /7.0s, these,cfestivals ,had become an
important circµit for jazz musicians in ther United ,States and especially ,in
Europe,. where in some ·cities· the ,festivals occurred throughout the year.
~uring this era, many forms of ,musk have. been presented under the jazz.
banner; Ln NewYork and,other.major.cities, on a givefl night one might hear
a virtual history of the form: re 7.creations of the earliest work of King Oliver
and Jelly Roll Morton,· big band music (withs charts .. . sometimes borrowed
from the Smithsonian or the Institute for Jazz Studies at Rutge rs Un.iv,er-.
sity), :small· bands playing :bebop or modal jazz in ,,:t he tradition .of ,Miles
Davis -and John Coltrane,· replays of the avant-gardists of the late 1950s,
6.0s, and .70s, fusiqns of many kinds-imrolying rock, flamenco, ,opera arid
other European art musics, gospel; and hip-hop. In the twenty-first century,
some of these mixes left jazz afficionados doubtful that the word . jazz still
applied to music marketed arid .eveQ sincerely played under its name. These
musical experiments Jeft otlier observers. hopeful that whether called jazz
or· not, the new mixes would iriclude ingredients from which the forms of
things yet unknown would crystallize. ,
This period saw the .rise of blues: as a ,. worldwide music , and .of. rhythm
and blues-very often, as ;noted, .involving singers who got ,their , start in
church-as a local urban youth phenomenon that captured the, worlds
attention. By the mjd-1960s ,. a new hard-driving blues line called funk
Was giving new. energy to · the generally softer sway of Motown and most
other (blues and gospel-based) forms of R&B. James Brown, Sly Sto11e, the
Funkadelics , and their many imitators, along with those who were extend-
I .
I 1/
I
8 THE VERNACULAR TRADITION, PART 2
ing the, idiom on their own, were holding center stage on the secular bi
music scene. Many -of the new Afro-Pop world music productions a:ck
from these highly danceable roots i Several experts report the bass d aw
b . h . I rulll and horn lines of James Brown as emg t e smg e most sampled sourc .
the realm of hip-hop, where sampling is a definitive mode. e 111
The story of the forms and meanings of hip-hop is still unfolding. Mo .
histories mark its starting place in uptown New York City, particularly t
the Bronx, while also crediting important background activities in an~
around Kingston, Jamaica. Whats clear now is that beginning sometime in
the early 1970s, a form of spoken-word a:rt was emerging that was driven by
new technologies, by the will to sample, remix, and improvise rhythmical
commentary over existing recorded materials of many kinds; and by the
flow of the human voice in spirited and often defiant recitation. Some
of the performances and recordings involved . virtuosic improvisation. Buf
at least as many hip-hop artists were careful loose-leaf poets who tight-
ened their words on paper and then memorized ·them for public presenta-
tions that · could seem improvised on the spot. (Sometimes the rappers
rhythms were improvised when the lyrics were not.)
In the quarter century since hip-hop first hit the national airwaves and
party-spaces of America, the music has changed its course and, like jazz
and gospel, has fused with other forms-in search, always, of fresh effe~ts
and directions. It is ·a street party music, dance-club music: music of ·court-
ship and playful (as well as sometimes competitive and even hostile) social
interaction. It is a form of poetry·or spoken-word art where the subject
frequently has been the grittine·ss -of urban black life-and where, increas-
ingly, many other subjects . (including-romance, political activism, and the
difficulty of creating art) also are raised .· Hip-hops advocates speak of the
characteristically hardcore diction and . subject matter of hip-hop · as new
forms of black urban realism and protest, harsh but true reports from the
bottom of the American social hierarchy. They also smile at over-the-top
parodic aspects of the music that insiders know not to take too· seriously.
At its best, this is a music of broad aesthetic pleasures: of intricate Afro-
rhythms and rhymes to challenge and ·delight the mind, the foot, and the
eardrum-a music that raises contemporary black questions in an idiom no
one can ignore.
As much as any black vernacular form in the last hundred years, hip-hop
music and culture represent a generational preference, with those coming
of age before roughly 1980 typically expressing strong ·dislike of hip-hop
culture in its various manifestations. Hip-hops most outspoken critics
emphasize the musics casual uses of explicitly , sexual language and the
association of certain rappers with gangs, violence, misogyny, loveless sex,
and bragging about personal wealth. But as ,hip-hop -is gradually institu-
tionalized, not just as a commercial product but as an art form . to be
researched and studied as well as aesthetically enjoyed (and blended.with
other forms of expression on a worldwide scale), it is emerging as a might-
ily persistent force. In many contemporary schools, hip-hop is employed as
a tool for teaching. As with other forms of black vernacular expression-
blues and jazz in particular-hip-hop is becoming a global music. And as
it develops new accents and vocabularies in Asia Africa Europe and
throughout the Americas, new hip-hop forms, buil; on a bl~ck U.S. base,
are emerging fast.
lack
raw
urn,
e in
l ost
Yin
and
ein
1 by
ical
the
)me
But
;i;ht-
1ta-
iers
and
iazz
!CtS
urt-
cial
ject
!as-
the
the
1ew
the
-top
1sly.
fro-
the
1 no
hop
1ing
hop
itics
the
sex,
titu-
) be
With
ight-
:d as
ln-
1d as
and
)ase ,
.........._
----------.....i.---.1.__iu___~
INTRODUCTION 9
DEFINING THE VERNACULAR
What •is the vernacular:i Accordin w; b · · , ··
comes from the Latin-; z g to ster s secon.d edition, the term
vernacu us: Born m one h . f
a slave born in his masters house a . t· ,, s ouse, native, rom verna;
ings the following· (1) b l . nda ive -and counts among its mean-
. e ongmg to, eveloped in . and sp· oke d b
the people of a particular place regi . , _ _ _ or use y
( ) h . . on, or countr:y· native · md1genou 2 c aractenst1c ·of a -locality· local I I th f s. · · ·
vernacular may be defined a · _n e context O American art, the
. t t· b t h s express10n that springs from · the creative
m erllac. wn e w<;,en t e_ received or learned traditions and that which is
loca y mvented, made m America ,, Th. d fi . . d .
can cultural historia J h A K . is e mt10n, enved from Ameri-
h , k n ° n · ouwenhoven and Ralph Ellison sees Man-
t:ttan s s y~crapershas_ well as Appalachian quilts as vernacuiar because
/Y) u~e mo :r~ tehc_ mques and forms (machines, factory-made materials -
e c.d a onghwit _ w at Ellison calls the play-it-by-ear methods and locai
pro ucts t at give American for th - d . .
Wh h . . ms eir · 1stmct1ve resonances and power:
atd t en, IS the- Afncan American vernacular? It consists of forms
sacre -songs, prayers, ~nd sermons-and: secular-work songs, secular
rhymes and songs, blues, Jazz, and stories of many kinds. It also consists of
dances, wordless musical performances, stage shows, and visual art forms-
of many sorts.
As Houston A. Baker Jr. noted, the word vernacular as a cultural term
has ?een used most frequently to describe developments in the world of
~rch1t~ct1;1re. In contrast to the exalted , refined, or learned styles of design-
m~ bmldmgs, the .vernacular in architecture ,refers both to local styles by
~udders un~ware of or unconcerned with developments beyond their par-
ticular provmce and to works by inspired, cosmopolitan architects such as
Frank Lloyd Wright, a careful student of architecture ·as a worldwide enter-
prise and of the latest technologies but also one who wanted ·his buildings
custom-made for their surroundings.
This example from architecture is relevant insofar as the makers of black
vernacular art used the American language and everything at their disposal
to make art that paid a minimum of attention ·to the Thou-shalt-nots of the
academy or -the arbiters of high style. Coming from the bottom ·of the
American social ladder, blacks have been relatively free from. scrutiny by
the official cultural monitors. As a group they tended to care little about
such opinions; wh~t the black social dance called the Black Bottom looked
like to the proctors at the local ballet class ,(be they white or black) was of
little interest to them. Thus it is no surprise that the black inventors of this
rich array of definitively.American forms have had such a potent ,impact on
Americas cultural life and history.
The forms included here are varied and resist aesthetic ,generalizations.
One is drawn nonetheless to parts of Zora Neale Hurstons wonderful cata-
log of the Characteristics of Negro Expression: angularity, asymmetry,
a tendency toward mimicry and the will to adorn. In addition, the,forms
share traits that reflect their African background: call-response patterns· of
many kinds; group creation; and a poly-rhyt_hmically percussive,_ dance-beat
orientation not only in musical forms but m the rhythm of a hne, tale, or
rhyme. It is not surprising that improvisation is a highly prized a~pect
of vernacular performance. Here too one finds European, Euro-American,
and American Indian forms reshaped to African American purposes and
II
I
I
l
10 THE VERNACULAR TRADITION. PART 2
sensibilities. For example, like black folktales,tales from Europe oft 1
clear delineations of sacred and profane, good and evil, righteous pu e~ hack
and righteously punished. Similarly, the blues offer few such consol:~~ ers
solutions, or even scapegoats. At times what seems revealed is the starkons,
of a life that is real, that is tough, and that must be confronted without~s
convenience of formulaic dodges or wishful escapes. Even the spirit t t
admit that Ive been buked and Ive been scorned, Ive · been talked ab ua s
I Sure as youre born. And the church songs involve-along with the ye:~:
ing for heavens peace-confrontation with real troubles of the world and
the will to do something about them. ·
rOne of the most compelling efforts at generalization about African
American aesthetics is drawn by Henry Louis Gates Jr. from the vernacular
itself. Drawing on linguistic research by Geneva Smitherman and others
Gates has defined signifying-the often competitively figurative, subver.
sively parodying speech of tales and of less formalized talk as well as of
various forms of music-as an impulse that operates not only between con-
testing tale tellers but between writers (and painters, and dancers, etc.) as
well. According to this view, Toni Morrison signifies on writers who pre-
cede her by revising, their conceptions of character and scene, for example,
or perhaps she even signifies on aspects of the novelistic tradition itself.
In Gatess complex formulations about how African Americans create, the
vernacular meets not only formal art but the world of scholarly. criticism
as well.
This leaves us with a battery of concerns from postmodern cultural criti-
cism: Is the idea of the .vernacular essentialist, that is, dependent on defi-
nitions of racial essences that are not knowable outside the black circle?
What is black about the black vernacular? When is American culture not
black and vernacular? What stake do cultural observers have in this termi-
nology, or, for that matter, in its rejection?
This leads us further to inquire: How were this sections entries selected?
Whence came these particular texts? Pouring over dozens of anthologies
and collections, hymnals, songbooks, recordings, and literary works yielded
texts that are not only historically representative but also distinctive and
resonant with aesthetic power. One abiding problem with capturing such
works is that they were not originally constructed for the ·printed page but
for performance within complicated social and often highly ritualized set-
tings. Nonstandard pronunciations in texts transcribed from records ~re
generally represented with a minimum of invented spellings-the eye dia-
lect so often used by American writers to designate declasse or politically
disempowered groups. This effort was informed- by those of writers who
captured black speech by getting the rhythms right, the pauses, the special
emphases and colors. But contractions and new spellings were allowed
when they seemed called for.
What determines the order of the vernacular -selections, genre hr genre?
Whenever possible, works are presented in chronological order and are
clustered according to authorship. But because authorship and chronology
are often unknown or ambiguous (for example, who first told the tale of the
rabbit and the tar-baby?), we simply have done our best to ascertain credits
and dates when they are available. In the folktales section, works are cred-
ited and dated in footnotes, but-recognizing that in this instance the
·--- -
INTRODUCTION 11
authors are the recorders (brilliantly artistic ones though they may be) of
works created incrementally by many, many voices over many; many years-
they are listed not by date or writer but by subject: the aniinal tales · precede
the ones with h,uman characters and follow a general chronological arc.
Such broad thematjc and timelin~ concerns govern all of the vernacular
sections orderings-even when spedfic dates and authors are given. For
even in the case of a Duke Ellington song or a \\tlarrin Luther King ,sermon/
speech, for which date and author seem, so specific, what we reproduce
here is one particular text or version of a performance given over and over,
according to changing settings and moments. And both Ellington and King
draw on rich vernacular traditions (on black and unknown bards) to fashion
and project their works. (ln Ellingtons case, the best text may be the
recorded text, with its performance by the sixteen members of his band,
each of whom adds much more to the creative process than is the: case with
European classical music.) More than any other form of black literature,
the vernacular resists being captured on a page or in a hi~torical f~ame: by
definition, it is about gradual, group creation; it is about change.
,Clearly, the selections here and on t\ie .StudySpace playlist are not meant
to be definitive but to invite further explorations and findings. Black ver-
nacular forms are works in progress, experiments in a still new country.
They have not survived because they are perfect, polished jewels but
because they are vigorous fountains of expression. Not only are they influ-
ential · for writers but they are wonderful creations on their own. In the
black tradition, no forms are more quick or overflowing with black power
and black meaning.
GOSPEL
I n a sense, the distinction between spirituals and gospel is so slight that it seems contrived. Both are black sacred songs, church songs that are constructed in a
variety of forms within the African American musical tradition. Both are born
and nurtured in the context of ritualized Christian worship, and yet both com-
ment widely on the trying circumstances of black life in white America. To· com-
plicate the picture ,rven more, traditional Negro spirituals are frequently rendered
in a gospel manner. Sometimes, indeed, songs from eighteenth- and nineteenth-
c,entury English hymnals-most notably the songs of Isaac Watts-may be rendered
in so convincing a gospel version that listeners have thought them generated as the
spirituals were generated: within the richly dramatic space of the black church ser-
vice itself. ·
What is the gospel manner? And what is its history? Briefly, gospel music emerged
in the first decades of the twentieth century as blues and early jazz styles of singing
and playing instruments began to exert a ,powerful impact on the·way church musi-
cians conceived their task. Especially in holinds churches, Churches of God in
Christ-those farthest from the genteel European models of churchly decorum-a
highly percussive, polyrhythmically syncopated, and bfuesy music began to appear.
These singers, s13ys poet and critic Sterling A. Brown, ·
,,,
fight the devil by using what have been considered the devils weapons . …
CATEGORIES
Economics
Nursing
Applied Sciences
Psychology
Science
Management
Computer Science
Human Resource Management
Accounting
Information Systems
English
Anatomy
Operations Management
Sociology
Literature
Education
Business & Finance
Marketing
Engineering
Statistics
Biology
Political Science
Reading
History
Financial markets
Philosophy
Mathematics
Law
Criminal
Architecture and Design
Government
Social Science
World history
Chemistry
Humanities
Business Finance
Writing
Programming
Telecommunications Engineering
Geography
Physics
Spanish
ach
e. Embedded Entrepreneurship
f. Three Social Entrepreneurship Models
g. Social-Founder Identity
h. Micros-enterprise Development
Outcomes
Subset 2. Indigenous Entrepreneurship Approaches (Outside of Canada)
a. Indigenous Australian Entrepreneurs Exami
Calculus
(people influence of
others) processes that you perceived occurs in this specific Institution Select one of the forms of stratification highlighted (focus on inter the intersectionalities
of these three) to reflect and analyze the potential ways these (
American history
Pharmacology
Ancient history
. Also
Numerical analysis
Environmental science
Electrical Engineering
Precalculus
Physiology
Civil Engineering
Electronic Engineering
ness Horizons
Algebra
Geology
Physical chemistry
nt
When considering both O
lassrooms
Civil
Probability
ions
Identify a specific consumer product that you or your family have used for quite some time. This might be a branded smartphone (if you have used several versions over the years)
or the court to consider in its deliberations. Locard’s exchange principle argues that during the commission of a crime
Chemical Engineering
Ecology
aragraphs (meaning 25 sentences or more). Your assignment may be more than 5 paragraphs but not less.
INSTRUCTIONS:
To access the FNU Online Library for journals and articles you can go the FNU library link here:
https://www.fnu.edu/library/
In order to
n that draws upon the theoretical reading to explain and contextualize the design choices. Be sure to directly quote or paraphrase the reading
ce to the vaccine. Your campaign must educate and inform the audience on the benefits but also create for safe and open dialogue. A key metric of your campaign will be the direct increase in numbers.
Key outcomes: The approach that you take must be clear
Mechanical Engineering
Organic chemistry
Geometry
nment
Topic
You will need to pick one topic for your project (5 pts)
Literature search
You will need to perform a literature search for your topic
Geophysics
you been involved with a company doing a redesign of business processes
Communication on Customer Relations. Discuss how two-way communication on social media channels impacts businesses both positively and negatively. Provide any personal examples from your experience
od pressure and hypertension via a community-wide intervention that targets the problem across the lifespan (i.e. includes all ages).
Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in
in body of the report
Conclusions
References (8 References Minimum)
*** Words count = 2000 words.
*** In-Text Citations and References using Harvard style.
*** In Task section I’ve chose (Economic issues in overseas contracting)"
Electromagnetism
w or quality improvement; it was just all part of good nursing care. The goal for quality improvement is to monitor patient outcomes using statistics for comparison to standards of care for different diseases
e a 1 to 2 slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on the different models of case management. Include speaker notes... .....Describe three different models of case management.
visual representations of information. They can include numbers
SSAY
ame workbook for all 3 milestones. You do not need to download a new copy for Milestones 2 or 3. When you submit Milestone 3
pages):
Provide a description of an existing intervention in Canada
making the appropriate buying decisions in an ethical and professional manner.
Topic: Purchasing and Technology
You read about blockchain ledger technology. Now do some additional research out on the Internet and share your URL with the rest of the class
be aware of which features their competitors are opting to include so the product development teams can design similar or enhanced features to attract more of the market. The more unique
low (The Top Health Industry Trends to Watch in 2015) to assist you with this discussion.
https://youtu.be/fRym_jyuBc0
Next year the $2.8 trillion U.S. healthcare industry will finally begin to look and feel more like the rest of the business wo
evidence-based primary care curriculum. Throughout your nurse practitioner program
Vignette
Understanding Gender Fluidity
Providing Inclusive Quality Care
Affirming Clinical Encounters
Conclusion
References
Nurse Practitioner Knowledge
Mechanics
and word limit is unit as a guide only.
The assessment may be re-attempted on two further occasions (maximum three attempts in total). All assessments must be resubmitted 3 days within receiving your unsatisfactory grade. You must clearly indicate “Re-su
Trigonometry
Article writing
Other
5. June 29
After the components sending to the manufacturing house
1. In 1972 the Furman v. Georgia case resulted in a decision that would put action into motion. Furman was originally sentenced to death because of a murder he committed in Georgia but the court debated whether or not this was a violation of his 8th amend
One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard. While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or
Ethical behavior is a critical topic in the workplace because the impact of it can make or break a business
No matter which type of health care organization
With a direct sale
During the pandemic
Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record
3. Furman v. Georgia is a U.S Supreme Court case that resolves around the Eighth Amendments ban on cruel and unsual punishment in death penalty cases. The Furman v. Georgia case was based on Furman being convicted of murder in Georgia. Furman was caught i
One major ethical conflict that may arise in my investigation is the Responsibility to Client in both Standard 3 and Standard 4 of the Ethical Standards for Human Service Professionals (2015). Making sure we do not disclose information without consent ev
4. Identify two examples of real world problems that you have observed in your personal
Summary & Evaluation: Reference & 188. Academic Search Ultimate
Ethics
We can mention at least one example of how the violation of ethical standards can be prevented. Many organizations promote ethical self-regulation by creating moral codes to help direct their business activities
*DDB is used for the first three years
For example
The inbound logistics for William Instrument refer to purchase components from various electronic firms. During the purchase process William need to consider the quality and price of the components. In this case
4. A U.S. Supreme Court case known as Furman v. Georgia (1972) is a landmark case that involved Eighth Amendment’s ban of unusual and cruel punishment in death penalty cases (Furman v. Georgia (1972)
With covid coming into place
In my opinion
with
Not necessarily all home buyers are the same! When you choose to work with we buy ugly houses Baltimore & nationwide USA
The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be
· By Day 1 of this week
While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material
CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013)
5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda
Urien
The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle
From a similar but larger point of view
4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open
When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition
After viewing the you tube videos on prayer
Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages)
The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough
Data collection
Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an
I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option. I would want to find out what she is afraid of. I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an
Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych
Identify the type of research used in a chosen study
Compose a 1
Optics
effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte
I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources
Be 4 pages in length
soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test
g
One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research
Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti
3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family
A Health in All Policies approach
Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum
Chen
Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change
Read Reflections on Cultural Humility
Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing
Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section
Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott
Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident