IN WHICH WILL BE FOUND WHAT IS SET FORTH THEREIN

Friday, February 14, 2014

AMIRI BARAKA - AFRICAN AMERICAN REVIEW VOLUME


Some years ago, unhappy with the sparse, recent critical work on Baraka, I joined together with Kalamu ya Salaam and William J. Harris to co-edit a special double issue of African American Review dedicated to Baraka's works. It remains sadly the case that we haven't had all that many substantive critical books on Baraka during the past fifteen years, though there are exceptions like Komozi Woodard's book and there have been some really sharp essays and book chapters. While we wait for the next round of readings to emerge, you might well want to fetch this volume and spend some time with it.  Here you'll find a moving note from Lorenzo Thomas, Ben Lee on Baraka and open form, Meta Jones on Baraka and jazz, Paul Youngquist's essential work on Baraka and Sci Fi, Farah Jasmine Griffin's prize-winning essay on Baraka's Billie holiday, and much else, including interviews.  AND, always the poetry:




(AFTER THE RAIN)
I used to be simple
When the world 
Was

"When was that?"
An LP after the '45
After the '78
When the sky was far away
When humans had faces
When the world minded
Its own business
& poetry was a dream
that left no footprints . . . .

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