Mark Anthony Neal's Blog, page 1013

March 24, 2012

"Be Good (Lion's Song)"--New Music Video by Gregory Porter (dir. Pierre Bennu)



"Be Good" is the first video from Jazz singer Gregory Porter's critically acclaimed album of the same name.

Purchase the album:
http://itunes.apple.com/us/album/be-good/id496955458?uo=4
http://motema.com/artist/gregory-porter
http://gregoryporter.com/store
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 24, 2012 05:13

March 23, 2012

The NRA, The Koch Brothers and the "Stand Your Ground Laws"


Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

The Martin Bashir Show (with guest host Karen Finney) featuring Michael Eric Dyson (Georgetown University), Joy-Ann Reid (theGrio.com) & Julian Epstein (The Nation).
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 23, 2012 20:36

Shit Men Say to Men Who Say Shit to Women on the Street



About:
"Shit Men Say to Men Who Say Shit to Women on the Street" was inspired by International Anti-Street Harassment Week.

It was created by a group of women and men in NYC who believe that street harassment is wrong, and that we all have a role to play in ending it - especially us guys.

The video shows non-violent some ways that men can interrupt street harassment as it happens. (And it happens all the time. Seriously. Go check. We will wait.)

Join us by sharing this video. And the next time you witness street harassment - and you will - say some shit. Please.

For more information on this video, email: pleasestopnyc@gmail.com
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 23, 2012 20:06

The Miami Hoodies #Trayvon



The Miami Heat in Solidarity with #Trayvon
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 23, 2012 13:10

Trailer: Audre Lorde--The Berlin Years (dir. Dagmar Schultz)



About the Film :


Audre Lorde's incisive, often-angry, but always brilliant writings and speeches defined and inspired the US-American feminist, lesbian, African-American, and Women-of-Color movements of the 1970s and 1980s. Audre Lorde - the Berlin Years 1984 to 1992 documents an untold chapter of Lorde's life: her influence on the German political and cultural scene during a decade of profound social change. The film explores the importance of Lorde's legacy, as she encouraged Afro-Germans—who, at that time, had no name or space for themselves—to make themselves visible within a culture that until then had kept them isolated and silent.
It chronicles Lorde's empowerment of Afro-German women to write and to publish, as she challenged white women to acknowledge the significance of their white privilege and to deal with difference in constructive ways. Previously unreleased archive material as well as present-day interviews explore the lasting influence of Lorde's ideas on Germany and the impact of her work and personality. For the first time, Dagmar Schultz's personal archival video-and audio-recordings reveal a significant part of the private Audre Lorde as well as her agenda—to rouse Afro-Germans to recognize each other. 2012 marks the 20-year anniversary of Audre Lorde's passing.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 23, 2012 06:23

Duke Performances & Left of Black Present Robert Glasper In Conversation


















In Conversation: Robert Glasper with Mark AnthonyNeal
Friday,March 30, 2012 | 12:00 pmJohnHope Franklin Center (2204 Erwin Rd.) Rom240 Free& open to the public
*Conversationwill be Stream Live at  http://www.ustream.tv/DukeUniversity

One-of-a-kindjazz pianist Robert Glasper joinsDuke Professor Mark Anthony Nealon the set of Left of Black , the weekly video webcast produced incollaboration with  the John HopeFranklin Center at Duke. Glasper and Neal will discuss Glasper's uniqueand wide-ranging career, which includes equal time in hip-hop (notably asmusical director for Mos Def & Bilal) & jazz (leading both the GlasperAcoustic Trio & the electric Glasper Experiment).

About Robert Glasper:
RobertGlasper has long kept one foot firmly planted in jazz and the other in hip-hop.His latest project, the Robert Glasper Experiment, is no exception. Glasper comes to Durham for a two night stand at Casbah,presented by Duke Performances, to mark the launch of Black Radio, a future landmark album forBlue Note Records that boldly stakes out new musical territory, drawing onjazz, hip-hop, R&B, and rock, but refusing to be defined by any one genre.
Thefirst full-length album from the Grammy-nominated keyboardist's electricExperiment band — saxophonist/vocoderist Casey Benjamin, bassist Derrick Hodge,and drummer Chris Dave — Black Radiofeatures many of Glasper's famous friends from the spectrum of urban music, ajaw-dropping roll call of special guests including Erykah Badu, Lupe Fiasco,Bilal, and Me'shell Ndegeocello. Follow Him on Twitter @RobertGlasper.

About Mark Anthony Neal:
MarkAnthony Neal is the author of five books including the forthcoming Looking For Leroy: (Il)Legible BlackMasculinities (New York University Press). He is professor of Black PopularCulture in the Department of African & African-American Studies at DukeUniversity and the host of the Weekly Webcast Left of Black. Follow him onTwitter @NewBlackMan.
Robert Glasper Experiment is aco-presentation of Duke Performances and the Casbah Durham.

::
Parking InformationAudiencemembers should park in one of the three parking garages near the John HopeFranklin Center. For directions, please click here. Parking vouchers willbe available.   
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 23, 2012 03:49

March 22, 2012

Ebru Today: James Braxton Peterson on Trayvon Martin and the Spectacle of KONY 2012



from Ebru Today :
Dr. James Braxton Peterson, director of Africana Studies at Lehigh University discusses the murder of Trayvon Martin. He delves into Florida's "stand your ground" law, lack of an investigation into the shooting, and race as a major possible factor in the killing and the aftermath.
 He then compares the reaction to KONY 2012 video with major media outlets' delay in reacting to the killing of Travyon Martin.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 22, 2012 13:35

March 21, 2012

In Conversation with History: Speaking Back to Trayvon























In Conversation with History: SpeakingBack to Trayvon by David J. Leonard | NewBlackMan
In wake of the murder ofTrayvon Martin, in the face of anger, sadness, frustration, outrage, sadness,and more anger, I found myself returning to several quotes that reflect onracism, violence, injustice, and resistance.  I found myself wanting to dialogue with these thinkers,these organic intellectuals, and those who continue to promote "freedom dreams."  This is my conversation within anexperimental dialogue that emphasizes the continuity of violence and resistancethroughout our history.
Sojourner Truth: "Thatman over there says that women need to be helped into carriages, and liftedover ditches, and to have the best place everywhere. Nobody ever helps me into carriages,or over mud puddles, or gives me any best place! And ain't I a woman?"  
DJL: Why does thiscontinue to be so true for women, for people of color, for the poor?  The parent over there sends their childout to play, without a worry; the child over can go to the park, walk to school,or go to the store, without any fears. Innocence is protected.  Nobody can say that for Trayvon Martin;ain't he a person; ain't a child? 
Frederick Douglas: "Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced,where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that societyis an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them."   
DJL: Mr. Douglas, your words remain true today.  Where Trayvon's was deprived of his humanity, where hisrights were ignored, where his future was denied "neither persons nor propertywill be safe."  
KahilGibran: "Learnt silence from the talkative, toleration from the intolerant, andkindness from the unkind; yet, I am ungrateful to these teachers."
DJL:Yes, in just three weeks, we have seen injustice from those responsible forjustice, terror from those who claim to protect, and erasure from thoseresponsible for education and informing the collective.  We have once again seen the stains andviolence of American racism.  Yet,we have seen the apathy and ignorance concerning these painful realities.
ShirleyChisholm: "Most Americans have never seen the ignorance, degradation, hunger,sickness, and futility in which many other Americans live. Until a problemreaches their doorsteps, they're not going to understand. . . Racism is souniversal in this country, so widespread and deep-seated, that it is invisiblebecause it is so normal." 
DJL:Ms. Chisholm, we are still seeing this today.  When black and suspicious becomes normalized, racism isinvisible; when the murder of black youth is not breaking news "it invisiblebecause it is so normal." When black death goes unnoticed it has become normaland acceptable.  Only when fathersand mothers, grandmothers and grandfathers, brothers and sisters, and sons anddaughters begin to contemplate "what if," what if my family or friends couldn'tgo to the store without fear, without threat, without potential death will wesee change. 
AlbertCamus: "In such a world of conflict, a world of victims and executioners, it isthe job of thinking people, not to be on the side of the executioners." 
DJL:Why do people continue to side with the executioners? But not in every case?  It must stop.  In a world where black youth can't walk to the store to buyskittles and something to drink, where black youth are deemed suspicious forwalking while black, in "a world of victims and executioners, it is the job ofthinking people, not to be on the side of the executioners." It is the job ofthinking people not to silence the critics, the fighters of freedom.
PaulRobeson: "The answer to injustice is not to silence the critic but to end theinjustice." 
DJL:Indeed, because in a world with Trayvon Martin, Sean Bell, Amadou Diallo, OscarGrant, Aiyana Jones, Robbie Tolan and so many more, "the answer to injustice isnot to silence the critic," to denounce those who bring up race, who are angry,who are outraged by the consequences of American racism and white privilege, "butto end the injustice." 
Paulo Freire: "Washing one's hands of the conflictbetween the powerful and the powerless means to side with the powerful, not tobe neutral."
DJL:In a world of injustice, where all violence, where all pain, where allsuffering, and where all injustice is not treated equal, ignore, denying, andminimizing will not bring about justice. Too many people are "washing theirhands."  They might as well keep itreal and own the fact that "to side with the powerful, not to be neutral."
Haile Selassie: "Throughouthistory it has been the inaction of those who could have acted, theindifference of those who should have known better, the silence of the voice ofjustice when it mattered most, that has made it possible for evil to triumph." 
DJL: Don't we knowthis? In the weeks since Trayvon was murdered, the silence from the "justice"system, the silence from "our leaders," the silence from the media, and from ourcollective inaction "has made it possible for evil to triumph."  
Grace Lee Boggs:"Each of us needs to be awakened to a personal and compassionate recognition ofthe inseparable interconnection between our minds, hearts, and bodies, betweenour physical and psychical well-being, and between our selves and all the otherselves in our country and in the world." 

DJL: I am tired of the silence, lethargy and apathy. I am sick of how wesleep through the pain of some.  Ina world where young black boys, and young Latino girls are unable to walkfreely, I hope everyone from every community will wake up to the pain andsuffering, wake up to view every life equally.  Our collective sleepiness is killing people and destroyingfamilies.   
Aimé Césaire: "When I turn on myradio, when I hear that Negroes have been lynched in America, I say that wehave been lied to…; when I turn on my radio, when I hear that Jews have beeninsulted, mistreated, persecuted, I say that we have been lied to…; when,finally, I turn on my radio and hear that in Africa forced labor has beeninaugurated and legalized, I say that we have certainly been lied to."
DJL: I know; when Iopen my books to learn about contemporary slavery, I think we have been liedto, racism is not dead; when I turn on my radio and hear about another case ofpolice brutality, I think we have been bamboozled, racism is not dead; when Igo on social media and see another slur, another dehumanizing image, and"another joke," I know we have been led astray, racism is not dead.  And when I hear about Trayvon Martin, aboy walking while black, I know that racism is alive and well and that onlywhen we rise up and demand change, we will the lying end.  
Jacques Derrida: "Wemust do and think the impossible. If only the possible happened, nothing more would happen.  If I only did what I can do, I wouldn'tdo anything."  If we don't demandand imagine a new reality, we aren't do anything.  
DJL: Amen! We mustdo and think the impossible; we must think justice for Trayvon and demand aworld free of degradation, dehumanization, and fear.  
Fred Hampton: "Letme just say: Peace to you, if you're willing to fight for it."  
DJL: Peace andjustice for Trayvon, peace and justice for the Martin family, and peace andjustice so there are no more Trayvons, that is if we are "willing to fight forit"
***
David J. Leonard is Associate Professor in the Department of Critical Culture, Genderand Race Studies at Washington State University, Pullman. He has written onsport, video games, film, and social movements, appearing in both popular andacademic mediums. His work explores the political economy of popular culture,examining the interplay between racism, state violence, and popularrepresentations through contextual, textual, and subtextual analysis. Leonard's latest book After Artest: Race and the Assault on Blackness will bepublished by SUNY Press in May of 2012.
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 21, 2012 18:49

Mark Anthony Neal's Blog

Mark Anthony Neal
Mark Anthony Neal isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Mark Anthony Neal's blog with rss.