Housing is a Human Right

Checking out this installation at this Fort Greene Laundromat (located at 81 Lafayette Avenue) sponsored by @laundromatproj on this rainy Tuesday evening in the Shire.

Some details noted below:

Housing is a Human Right launches with an exhibition of stories in a Laundromat in Fort Greene, Brooklyn Oct 27 – Nov 2.

Listening performance Oct 27th 7pm – 8:30pm

A Misrepresented People

My mom likes crap movies. She always had. I like indie movies. Films that break open or challenge conventional sociopolitical norms. I like nuance. I grew up in a poor, working class neighborhood. I can’t really explain why I like what I like. Looking at both parents, my tastes probably come from my father. My father was a mix of street and academy. He loved Gil Scott Heron and Led Zeppelin. My mom loved the Stylistics and Sister Sledge. I grew up knowing and loving all of it, but the complexity in Heron and Zeppelin carried greater weight.

In the aftermath of the Tyler Perry interview on 60 Minutes on Sunday, I remembered this variety of tastes in my own family. Perry’s interview ended on a sour note as he responded to Spike Lee’s criticism of his films. Yet, it left a set of lingering questions for me.

Does every black artist have a responsibility to represent only positive aspects black life in relation to the white imagination? Or can it be represented as it is? Because being black in America often means trying to prove you’re something you’re not. Our cultural identity is formed in opposition of a projected ‘norm’ [ahem, whiteness]. We’ve internalized and accepted our identity based on what white folks will think of us. What do we actually think of ourselves?

Do white people in America worry this much about the perception of white men in schlock or crap film? I doubt it. Yet, if we were to rank representations of the class within white society, we would see proportionately fewer stories of poor, rural, working class, white Americans than those living the middle class bourgeois suburban American dream.

My grandmother, my mother and my aunts like Tyler Perry’s films. Madea is recognizable to them: the trickster, the Shakespearean fool, Elegba, the foil character that pushes other characters to revelation of a truth. To my grandmother, Madea might as well been Brer Rabbit or Anasi. When I was in high school, my grandma insisted that we go see one of those chitlin circuit plays at the Riverside Theater in Milwaukee. It was a family event. I’m not going to lie; it was entertaining. But I also knew it was crap. To some folks in my family, they received it as high art. I was already a snob. Earlier in my theater class, we were searching for monologues for women of color beyond the usual suspects (can you name them? A Raisin in The Sun, Fences) and I stumbled upon George C. Wolfe’s The Colored Museum. And I found a kindred spirit. Wolfe’s Museum is composed of satirical vignettes of black American culture, representation and history. After reading one of the vignettes, The Last Mama on the Couch Play, I couldn’t take the play we were watching seriously. It had all the tropes and moralizing that broke me out in hives.

What’s the most quoted film in the black community? Ask anyone and they’ll tell you it’s The Color Purple. Walker’s novel was sanitized from its complex examination of sexuality and abuse in its film incarnation, produced by a black man and directed by a white guy. It was commercially viable, a breakout that told a narrative of the black experience that hadn’t been seen in a decade or at all. But my uncle Walker hated The Color Purple. I remember a Sunday after church, where he, my aunts and grandmother hotly debated whether the success of the film was damning to the representation of black men. He didn’t want the white world to view him as abuser. Does his objection make the story any less true? It’s one element of a narrative that’s bigger than just one black man’s experience.

The moralizing center in Tyler Perry’s films grates the nerves and infuriates black intelligentsia and middle class. This conflict isn’t new. Paul Robeson had similar critiques about religion’s (namely Christianity) role in the formation of black culture, political thought and engagement with the white majority American society in the 20th century. His feeling (which I share) was the over reliance on the faith sometimes created a passivity that paralyzed individual growth and social mobility (more on that for another time).

As for Spike Lee… I’m not sure if he should be throwing rocks. Just as much as Perry’s women characters lack dimension, Lee’s women characters have their ‘limits’ too.

If there were more diverse representations of the black American experience in film and television, would that dampen the voracity of Perry’s critics? Would it steer some of his fan base to consider other narratives of the black American experience beyond what they recognize as familiar? Step outside their comfort zone? Perhaps. Ultimately, the question comes down to whether or not these stories are economically viable to the dream factory. Can Hollywood profit from presenting the wide swath of the black American experience to satiate all classes?

I don’t know. For me personally, I like what I like. I like shows like Community because it presents a diverse ensemble cast that experiences America a little sideways with authentic and quirky voices. I like shows like Mad Men because it’s nuanced and challenges me as a viewer and as a writer. It’s not everyone’s cup of tea. I get that. Perry’s films lack dimensionality for me. But my mom, my aunts, my grandma all own DVDs from Perry’s dream factory. Do I disown my relatives for their love of crap? As much as my grandma has expressed pride and admiration for Perry’s opus, I can’t forget that she was the one who gave me her copy of For Colored Girls Who Considered Suicide When The Rainbow is Enough, and gave me William Earnest Hinley’s Invictus to remind me that I defined me, not everyone else. The same aunt that owns a DVD of the stage production of Madea, was also the one who put me on to Tori Amos’ From the Choirgirl Hotel and Portishead’s Live at Roseland. My aunt likes what she likes. And while there’s always a little bit of friction within a family in terms of class and social mobility, I don’t feel it’s fair to invalidate their experiences simply because mine have ‘changed’. I can relate to Martin Lawrence’s Roscoe Jenkins and the work it takes to reconcile the contradiction of class and culture within your own family.

I do feel that the criticism from some folks in the greater African American community for Tyler Perry is rooted in middle class notions of ‘respectability’, and certainly complicated by centuries of dehumanizing depictions of blackness in American and Western society. To be clear, I don’t like Tyler Perry’s films or plays. However, I can’t be dismissive of the population that does because to them, those characters mirror their reality.

I recognize that we all want to see idealized versions of ourselves. Something to combat the siege we feel as African Americans to constantly provide contrasting representations to stereotypes, caricatures and overly simplified assumptions about who and what we are to white society, and the world. Something that lives in the popular culture that can limit how many times we have to explain why we’re so articulate or why we’re capable of leading companies, or nations, without fear that we’ll get shot to death at our doorstep.

For me, I feel my responsibility as a writer is to create work that is an honest reflection of what I value and admire. I don’t expect that every black artist to create work I’ll like, nor do I expect every black artist to celebrate my work. But I believe there’s room in the universe for both to exist.

Ballots, bullets and bombs in Afghanistan – The Big Picture.

All eyes on Afghanistan. Obama has authorized deployment of 13,000 more troops.

Although I haven’t seen the film yet, I plan to see Rethink Afghanistan as soon as I get a free moment. It has been said that wars are necessary to secure a lasting peace, eight years in, I’ve got too many questions unanswered.

Time to think differently.

UPDATE.
I think Frank Rich’s column covered most of my concerns and objections to the escalation. The same congress that voted to divert resources from Afghanistan to pursue the threat of ‘weapons of mass destruction’ in Iraq, is responsible for the hot dusty mess in Afghanistan. I’m not a paid policy wonk on this, but I’ve maintained this position in private conversations with friends over the years that Afghanistan suffered from benign neglect. And that neglect has allowed the Taliban to seize control over the region and the years have taken its toll on our soldiers and the Afghan population. I understood why we went there in the first place, but our mission was muddled. We can topple regimes, but can we build nations?

Civil society can thrive with infrastructure. There’s no infrastructure in Afghanistan. There are barely roads that lead from mountainous terrain to towns, or cities. I’m not even sure how they’re able to gain access to water. Water is an under-reported political issue. I can only imagine that the geopolitical interests of powerful men who control these small provinces and villages have huge sway over people to secure their cooperation with Taliban leaders. It’s evident that to untangle the grip of Taliban has over Afghanistan will require more than 13,000 American soldiers that may have already served multiple tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan to date.

McChrystal’s assessment of the foothold of the insurgency aside, what are we going to do after that? What are we going to do to preserve the peace? The State Department was severely underfunded during the Bush Administration, a significant partner in preserving any military gain we make in any conflict we’re engaged in. And for those of us who believe that stability magically happens with a wave of a pen or at the barrel of the gun fail, it’s time to recognize that peace also comes from the hard work of civilians it takes to repair or build civil society. I’m remembering a scene in Charlie Wilson’s War, where Tom Hanks as Charlie Wilson presented a plan where our government had denied his request to fund school construction in villages in Afghanistan after we supplied copious resources to the Afghanis to help them drive out the Soviet army.

Obama’s Nobel Prize win presents the obvious paradox. How can he escalate a conflict and still be honored with the highest award in the world? Simultaneously, the global recognition of an American leader that’s asking the world to be accountable in their own fate is crucial. And on the heels of that recognition, will the Afghan people secure their own future and achieve a lasting peace without a civil war? How do we in the West support a people’s desire in self-determination?

And I’m still left asking the most important question, how can we be the change we wish to see in the world?

Kevin Coval: A Post-Olympic Plan for a City Under Siege

There’s a special place in my heart for the Second City. Born and raised just 90 minutes north of Chicago, my family and I would find ourselves on somewhere on the South Side, crammed around a kitchen table at my favorite aunt’s house. We came to visit often; for school trips, church conferences and family gatherings. Chicago, in my earliest memories, is shorthand for ‘family’.

So it’s no surprise that when Chicago is dealt a blow, I feel it too. And it hurts. It breaks my heart. I see echoes of my beginnings too in broken neighborhoods, broken homes, broken bodies. I remember violence that took some of my classmates before they could reach their 16th birthday. I remember violence that still makes me afraid to wear red and black in neighborhoods in Milwaukee.

Yet in the wake of tragedy, I still have hope. I’ve got friends in Chicago who are doing good work. I’ve got friends who are writers, teachers, artists working with Chicago kids citywide, teaching them to craft words and manifest change in their lives. I’ve got friends who write grants to fund programs that have been victim of too many budget cuts supporting after school programming for high school aged youth. The above video clip is from a documentary about the people and work of Louder Than a Bomb.

I encourage you to read Kevin Coval’s full post. Louder Than A Bomb (LTAB) is approaching its ten-year anniversary. Through writing, poetry and performance, young people have found safe space to explore the struggles they face as teens growing up in tough neighborhoods, as well as the paradox of being between adult and childhood. They are doing all of this by kicking rhymes and writing poems.

Poems. Yeah, I said it. Poems. I know that writing saved my life when I was coming up. Hear me. Writing saved my life. There’s more I can say about that, but that’s for another time, when we’re better acquainted. But you should know this: there are words that can destroy, but there are words that can create. Create possibility, create ideas, create art, create change. Words that remind us to be the change we wish to see in the world.

Affirm Life.