"Detail by detail, stage by stage, he pulls the revolutionary suit
off Jones with superb analysis and high style...This book should be
read by students of black studies across this nation."
-- "New York Daily News"
"Watts applies scalpel-like precision to his pursuit of the
intellectual journey of Baraka (Leroi Jones), from his beat period
in the 1950s through his black nationalist and Marxist positions of
the mid-1980s."
--"Booklist"
Amiri Baraka, formerly known as LeRoi Jones, became known as one
of the most militant, anti-white black nationalists of the 1960s
Black Power movement. An advocate of Black Cultural Nationalism,
Baraka supported the rejection of all things white and western. He
helped found and direct the influential Black Arts movement which
sought to move black writers away from western aesthetic
sensibilities and toward a more complete embrace of the black
world. Except perhaps for James Baldwin, no single figure has had
more of an impact on black intellectual and artistic life during
the last forty years.
In this groundbreaking and comprehensive study, the first to
interweave Baraka's art and political activities, Jerry Watts takes
us from his early immersion in the New York scene through the most
dynamic period in the life and work of this controversial figure.
Watts situates Baraka within the various worlds through which he
travelled including Beat Bohemia, Marxist-Leninism, and Black
Nationalism. In the process, he convincingly demonstrates how the
25 years between Baraka's emergence in 1960 and his continued
influence in the mid-1980s can also be read as a general commentary
on the condition of black intellectuals during the same time.
Continuallyusing Baraka as the focal point for a broader analysis,
Watts illustrates the link between Baraka's life and the lives of
other black writers trying to realize their artistic ambitions, and
contrasts him with other key political intellectuals of the time.
In a chapter sure to prove controversial, Watts links Baraka's
famous misogyny to an attempt to bury his own homosexual past.
A work of extraordinary breadth, Amira Baraka is a powerful
portrait of one man's lifework and the pivotal time it represents
in African-American history. Informed by a wealth of original
research, it fills a crucial gap in the lively literature on black
thought and history and will continue to be a touchstone work for
some time to come.
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