Ground WorkHaki Madhubuti is one of the foremost Black poets and has been in the vanguard of Black letters for more than 25 years. He has perfected the ability to combine politics and poetry in a powerful and unique style that is both accessible and profound. GroundWork: Selected Poems from 1966-1996 is a landmark collection of Madhubuti's poetic vision for and critique of African-Americans and American society as a whole. From ""But He Was Cool"" and ""One Sided Shoot-out"" to ""White People are People Too"" and ""Too Many of Our Young are Dying"", GroundWork is a compendium of verse that is both thoughtful, memorable, and represents some of the best work in a generation of American poets of any color. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 21
Page
... nation . You create and sustain your own identity . In effect , Jewish teachers teach Jewish children , especially ... nation's consciousness . What Tarzan did was not only to turn us away from Africa , but from ourselves . And that's ...
... nation . You create and sustain your own identity . In effect , Jewish teachers teach Jewish children , especially ... nation's consciousness . What Tarzan did was not only to turn us away from Africa , but from ourselves . And that's ...
Page 31
... nation and if the nation is to live and prosper the family will live and endure because the nation is families united . there is much special about black women , the way GROUNDWORK : SELECTED POEMS 33 .
... nation and if the nation is to live and prosper the family will live and endure because the nation is families united . there is much special about black women , the way GROUNDWORK : SELECTED POEMS 33 .
Page 70
Haki R. Madhubuti. nations are like people they need each other no nation is truly independent all nations are interdependent however some nations are more dependent on other nations than on themselves so as to put them at the mercy of ...
Haki R. Madhubuti. nations are like people they need each other no nation is truly independent all nations are interdependent however some nations are more dependent on other nations than on themselves so as to put them at the mercy of ...
Contents
Foreword by Gwendolyn Brooks xiii | |
The New Integrationist 21 | |
Contradiction in Essence 27 | |
Copyright | |
16 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actions Afrikan ain't america answers beauty become believe better body bring brothers build clean clear color comin coming continue culture dance death direction don't dreams earth enemy exist eyes face fear feel fight force future give head hear heart human ideas kill knowledge land language learned light listen live look lost lovers meaning memory mind mothers move natural negro never niggers night ourselves play poems poetry poets political positive question quiet race remember rise running seek share sisters smiles speak step stop struggle talk taught teach tell thought truth understand University values vision voice waiting walk wind woman women writers young