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Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity by Imani Perry
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Black in Blues Quotes Showing 1-30 of 48
“People, especially elders, repeat stories over and over again with purpose. In the arrogance of youth, we often think they do I because they are absent-minded. Now I know they repeat themselves because they’ve whittled like down into observations that should not be forgotten. They are authoring scriptures of their own.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“This blue-black living and doing is a bittersweet virtue, mastery in heartbreak, and raw laughter from the underside. We people who created a sound for the world’s favorite color—the blues—offer a testimony.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“Self-regard takes many forms, and it is the precondition for seeing to a future not yet realized but deeply yearned for—that is freedom.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“That's the calling, to see through time in order to see today. Each act of haunting and witnessing the past is also the work of living in the along. You know the plot device of time-travel stories, how if the contemporary figure goes into the past, her meddling can forever shape the future? In popular culture, that's considered a bad thing. But in our lives, it can be holy.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“Melancholy is part of social movement, as is restraint. They are companions. The work of organizing for freedom requires a management of rage that can break your heart. There is no good reason one should have to endure spittle and bombs, insult, dogs, and jail in order to achieve simple legal recognition.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“Learning the history of Liberia is a lesson in the vexing complexity and always just-around-the-bend hypocrisy of human beings.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“Imagine what it must have been like, to be a person with faculties—thoughts and imaginings that lay far beyond that which those who claimed to own you could reach. They—masters—could possess body but not mind. Your thoughts, your feelings, your prayers, your art were yours. A sound could be released to attest to all of that, a sound to make the hairs on the back of a body’s neck stand up. A sound without words but fully imbued with meaning. Held but never possessed. A BLUE NOTE.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“The widely embraced Christian God works in mysterious ways, not certain results. Hoodoo was therefore a necessary partner. Prior to emancipation, or widespread literacy, it was a system for collecting and preserving information to navigate life.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“The slave trade was central to Portuguese interest in the Kongo kingdom. And though King Afonso I was nominally opposed to slavery, he practically accepted it, so long as those who were enslaved were their war captives or those who were being punished for wrongdoing. However, he balked when Portuguese merchants began demanding Kongo citizens as chattel slaves in exchange for Portuguese goods. The Portuguese turned to taking Kongo citizens with abandon, despite the king’s protests.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“When a person was placed on an auction block, they were actively removed from civil society. But when the enslaved adorned burial grounds and even their own bodies, they sustained a belief in their souls and intellect.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“Catholicism and other forms of Christianity would become tools to control and dominate enslaved and colonized people. The Kongo did not meet the Europeans with that assumption. They would learn it the hard way.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“Consistently, in most places in the New World—as varied as Haiti, Liberia, South Carolina, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic, and Louisiana—and among most people, the creation of Blackness meant that proximity to Whiteness, while favored, was not Whiteness.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“Haiti has suffered. The first free Black republic was punished for its valor. The debt imposed upon it in exchange for a too-meager and inconsistent political recognition has kept it beholden to France, and along with that, it has born the weight of the US empire’s strategic investments and habitual efforts at military control. Internally, color and caste continued to matter long after the French were gone. Raimond changed, but the legacy of that plantation hierarchy is felt even today.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“blue took on particular meanings in specific contexts. On the revolutionary side, it was a color of Black self-adornment in the face of disregard. It reflected tastes retained across the oceans. And blue had an array of symbolic spiritual meanings.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“We often think, and reasonably so, that the condition of the enslaved is one of indistinction and disregard. But taste and even idiosyncrasy show both collective and personal self-regard. The enslaved fashioned themselves with care, even as their lives were considered fungible and not their own. This sense of self that existed, even when wholly dispossessed and literally being the legal property of another, became a feature of what it was to be Black in the New World.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“James Field Stanfield was a sailor aboard the True Blue in a 1775 voyage from West Africa to Jamaica and then Liverpool.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“This voyage of the True Blue was stacked tragedy. The European crew members were impressed, meaning forced into service. They were hungry. They were sick. They were beaten. The human chattel were far worse off. And this was part of how Blackness was made into the category of “the least of these.” It was never that others wouldn’t suffer. It was that Black people were designated as those who would suffer worst, and the others who suffered mightily but not so badly could feel both terror and relief at being close to Black life but not of it. Resentment was felt too. The crew worked for the slave trade. They didn’t make much money. And in the Americas, the presence of the enslaved would suppress the wages of the poor but free. Their labor would be worth less. It must have been unsettling to be so close to captivity and to have such a vulnerable freedom. It must have soured potential stirrings of sympathy into bitter gall.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“Hortense Spillers describes as an approach of treating all differences between cultures as demanding a hierarchy. Someone always had to be better or worse.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“Beloved is an embodied sorrow—the returned dead—who has to be contended with, coming from the water. Morrison knew Black life is a sea epic—a story of encounters with deep blue. There was no other way to get us so far from where our ancestors began.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“As far back as I can remember, I was aware of belonging to a group for whom the word “color” was potent. “The color of your skin,” “colored people,” “colorful people,” and “people of color” are all phrases that are associated with us Black Americans. And while “black” is our nominal color, even though our bodies range from alabaster to jet, the blues are our sensibility, hence the designation made famous by the writer Amiri Baraka: “blues people.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People
“On each hand that day, my uncle wore a single lapis ring. I was curious and asked him questions. Later he sent me articles about the symbolic meanings of lapis. I told him that I live according to one of his precepts, that as long as I can read, I can teach myself to do anything. Even survive a broken heart. And I have found something out along this way of grief-reading the sound and color and text. We Black people are not quite like other Americans. We do not live in the same fantasy that we might evade death by collecting things like dollars, houses, fences, and passports. But we are as human as humans come. The incomprehensible keeps happening. Death comes fast, frequent and unfair. And we're still here. We know how to breathe underwater. Living after death.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“You see? Blue is a portal. Our ancestors have worked so hard from the other side to keep us going; this is how we tend to them in return.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“A romance of Africa, a romance of America, a fetish of nationalism, myths of superior origins, or rankings of authenticity or admixture-each type of posturing, myth, and hierarchy is a danger because they lead us to either believe the funhouse distortion of the blue-eyed mirror or run away from the ugliness of history.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“Movement is divine word. To call organizing for freedom "the movement" was a strike of genius. The moves in our culture of art and performance-be they dancing, playing jazz, blues, or hambone, singing or hoofing-are all the art of living. And forgive us, Lord, for the Western sacrilege of sometimes being mere spectators to that divinity. It beckons participation.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“It's freedom we're seeking, after all; it's not a war or a board game in which we easily declare victory or defeat.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“One strange feature of Blackness is how often it is treated as static. Like Black just is as it will ever be. But displaced and misnamed people are ever evolving out of necessity. The truth is the condition is like waterways, blood vessels, circuits.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“Black watching, worry, caution, are wise because what if the ones holding out their hands don't, in fact, shake yours warmly, but instead snatch you into snares? And you lose your balance, gone in an instant, like a fly in Venus flytrap.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“It is a strange but persistent thing: to be possessed, desired, revolting. This triad of relations to power has been a long burden of Blackness, and its people.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity
“If Ellison's words serve as a meditation on the existential challenges of a Black life, then Toni Morrison's famous quip of a response
"Invisible to whom?"-is a reminder that Black folks have had to see each other regardless of what the larger world will recognize. That too is the majesty of the blues, a beauty shared and witnessed by its people, no matter who is listening. It is not the sound of appeal; it is the act of living. Together.”
Imani Perry, Black in Blues: How a Color Tells the Story of My People – The National Book Award Winner's Cultural Meditation on Race, Blues, and Identity

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