Nightmare Overhanging Darkly: Essays on African American Culture and ResistanceWith an analysis informed by more than two decades of cultural work and activism on the frontlines, Nightmare Overhanging Darkly reviews the historic tradition of Black cultural resistance to Western imperialism and oppression. In emphasizing the process by which creative artists have initiated and influenced social change, Dr. Acklyn Lynch issues a challenge to Black cultural workers and offers Black educators a blueprint for restructuring Black colleges and universities to best assist Black empowerment. Dr. Lynch centers his study on the 1940s to the 1990s and offers critiques of the major political activists and creative artists of that period -- including Paul Robeson, Sonia Sanchez, Charlie Parker, Malcolm X, Katherine Dunham, Jeff Donaldson, Alice Walker, George Jackson, Richard Wright, Toni Cade Bambara, Romare Bearden, KRS-ONE and others. Lynch reminds us that there is an organic link between art and resistance that moves beyond art for art's sake.--Publisher's description. |
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Page 36
... became the leader of the Free World , assisting with the Reconstruction of Europe through the Marshall Plan . Even after the Korean conflict , the economy was growing and Black veterans got jobs with expanded opportunities . But after ...
... became the leader of the Free World , assisting with the Reconstruction of Europe through the Marshall Plan . Even after the Korean conflict , the economy was growing and Black veterans got jobs with expanded opportunities . But after ...
Page 84
... became necessary to diffuse this situation , so that Harlem could be contained and efficiently controlled by City Hall . In the twenties , during the height of the Garvey movement and the Harlem Renaissance , the downtown " literati ...
... became necessary to diffuse this situation , so that Harlem could be contained and efficiently controlled by City Hall . In the twenties , during the height of the Garvey movement and the Harlem Renaissance , the downtown " literati ...
Page 90
... became the new thing when the white boys downtown figured out how to cop it ... Anyway , white musicians were " swinging " from one end of 52nd Street to the other , but there wasn't a black face in sight on the street except Teddy ...
... became the new thing when the white boys downtown figured out how to cop it ... Anyway , white musicians were " swinging " from one end of 52nd Street to the other , but there wasn't a black face in sight on the street except Teddy ...
Contents
Beyond Survival | 7 |
Black on Black Homicide | 27 |
Black Culture in the Early Forties | 53 |
Copyright | |
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