African-American Art
Creative African-American Literature
Were one to pause to give this subject consideration, it would appear that the vast majority of African-American artwork within the 20th century was organized around and largely revolved about pressing social issues of the time period. Despite the fact that African-Americans had been legally emancipated from slavery in the middle of the 19th century, there were still a number of eminent social issues (most noticeably civil rights and the lack thereof for African-Americans) that were addressed in both a political as well as an artistic context. One of the leading purveyors of works of arts to challenge and elucidate the numerous social ills African-Americans chose to address during this time period include the creations of writers. The medium of writing, both in the form of traditional creative writing as well as in the form of creative nonfiction writing, lent itself as the perfect voice for the articulation of struggles for people who were used to nothing but struggles virtually since they were brought to the United States of America. As such, it is nothing less than fascinating to consider the breadth and the focus of African-American literature during the 20th century, which would play a highly influential role in the pursuit of freedom and social justice that this population group would not be denied.
One of the most demonstrative, if not well-known, voices of African-Americans who crafted incendiary, intriguing literary works addressing a number of social injustices revolving around a perceived lack of freedom is that of LeRoi Jones, who also became known as Amiri Baraka midway through the 1960's. Jones was not only a political activist (and still is), but he was also a poet, playwright, essayist, and writer of fiction. Virtually all of his works encompass some fundamental aspect of the struggle for liberty and self-determination (Baraka, 1999, p. 63) that African-Americans demanded in the wake of the Civil Rights movement. The full political agenda of Jones which was inherently reflected in his writing, which was prone to vary during the many decades of prolific creative output he produced with his works of literature, is summarized at its most extreme from a combination piece of both essay and poem entitled, appropriately "state/meant"
The Black Artists role in America is to aid in the destruction of America as he knows it. His role is to report and reflect so precisely the nature of the society, and of himself in that society, that other men will be moved by the exactness of his rendering and…grow strong through this moving…and if they are white men…go mad, because they are drenched with the filth of their own evil (Jones, 1967, p. 251).
This quotation and this body of work was from Jones' most revolutionary period in which his politics was decidedly polarized into a black nationalist stance. What endures, of course, from this passage is the "role" of the "Black Artist." Jones' quotation about the eradication of America "as he knows it" is in reference to the segregated, Jim Crow espousing, oppressive America that had been circumscribing the rights and liberty of African-Americans for centuries. And, despite the fact that Jones may be more radical in his diction and in his approach in addressing such a concern, it is a highly valid one which was also addressed by numerous other African-American writers, particularly during the throes of the Civil Rights movement in the 20th century.
One of the most accessible forms of literature created by African-American artists during the Civil Rights era and beyond is poetry. Whereas traditional European poems tend to exhibit a flowery language and rigid adherence to structure that may alienate those who are not well versed within this form of literature, the vast majority of African-American poems are more discernible, yet none the less artistic, for their incorporation of themes related to social progress that was desired by this group of people. An integral aspect of the vast majority of African-American...
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