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Start a Riot! - Civil Unrest in Black Arts Movement Drama, Fiction, and Poetry (Hardcover)
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Start a Riot! - Civil Unrest in Black Arts Movement Drama, Fiction, and Poetry (Hardcover)
Series: Margaret Walker Alexander Series in African American Studies
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While the legacy of Black urban rebellions during the turbulent
1960s continues to permeate throughout US histories and discourses,
scholars seldom explore within scholarship examining Black Cultural
Production, artist-writers of the Black Arts Movement (BAM) that
addressed civil unrest, specifically riots, in their artistic
writings. Start a Riot! Civil Unrest in Black Arts Movement Drama,
Fiction, and Poetry analyzes riot iconography and its usefulness as
a political strategy of protestation. Through a mixed-methods
approach of literary close-reading, historical, and sociological
analysis, Casarae Lavada Abdul-Ghani considers how BAM
artist-writers like Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones), Ben Caldwell,
Gwendolyn Brooks, Sonia Sanchez, and Henry Dumas challenge
misconceptions regarding Black protest through experimental
explorations in their writings. Representations of riots became
more pronounced in the 1960s as pivotal leaders shaping Black
consciousness, such as Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., were
assassinated. BAM artist-writers sought to override the public's
interpretation in their literary exposes that a riot's disjointed
and disorderly methods led to more chaos than reparative justice.
Start a Riot! uncovers how BAM artist-writers expose anti-Black
racism and, by extension, the United States' inability to
compromise with Black America on matters related to citizenship
rights, housing (in)security, economic inequality, and
education-tenets emphasized during the Black Power Movement.
Abdul-Ghani argues that BAM artist-writers did not merely write
literature that reflected a spirit of protest; in many cases, they
understood their texts, themselves, as acts of protest.
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