Free sugar cane
Ponderings

Of Sugar, Social Media, and Symmetry

A standard Western education does not equip us with the language, skills, nor even the concepts, to fluently move between hierarchical and heterarchical perspectives and to understand them in coherent relationship to one another. Instead, we do what we have been taught to do: we mechanically abstract, extract, and reduce, and present these two inter-embedded perspectives as irreconcilable opposites that we must choose between, and in so doing, defend the one against “the other” at all costs.

Red Tails movie poster
American History, Black Freedom Traditions

Review: Red Tails [Repost]

The Tuskeegee Airmen, in more ways than one, were directly responsible for the fact that I had a seat in the theater. They fought for the rights that I take for granted: the right to be an American Airman; the right to be a full and free citizen of my own country; the right to simply sit wherever I want in a movie theater.

Uncategorized

Finding Answers

The results of the nation’s most recent presidential election vividly confirms for me what I had already come to believe many years ago: that arguing about and analyzing white supremacy, patriarchy, and capitalism in the abstract is not only pointless, but self-destructive.  Take, for instance, the tragic case of Chrystul Kizer, a young Black woman who was sentenced to 11…

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Poetry

Inconjunct

On December 5, 1791, Benjamin Banneker wrote the following entry in his dream journal: On the night of the fifth of December 1791, Being a deep Sleep, I dreamed that I was in a public Company, one of them demanded of me the limits of Rassanah Crandolph’s Soul had to display itself in, after it departed from her Body and…

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American History, Black Freedom Traditions, Genealogy

Education for Freedom: Black-Organized Education in Reconstruction Era Franklinton, NC

In April of 1866, Walter A. Bookram, a civic leader in the Black community of the town of Franklinton, North Carolina, wrote to the editors of the A.M.E. Church’s newsletter, The Christian Recorder, to inform them that a school for the town’s free and newly-freed Black residents had been established. The school in question was a night school housed in…

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American History

Dr. Barbara Jeanne Fields on the Moral Foundations of Freedom

“Slavery and freedom are incommensurable qualities, the difference between them an existential matter touching the dignity and worth of human life. People suffer, certainly, in freedom as well as in slavery (and, for that matter, in every known condition of human existence). But that unquestionable truth does not license anyone to tote up the suffering of one–in dollars of gold,…

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