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- <text id=94TT1379>
- <link 94TO0208>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Cover:Black Creativity:Cutting Edge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER, Page 74
- BLACK CREATIVITY: ON THE CUTTING EDGE
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> African-American art has had a long history, but its latest
- flowering may be the most promising of all
- </p>
- <p>By Henry Louis Gates Jr.
- </p>
- <p> [Henry Louis Gates Jr. is chairman of the department of Afro-American
- Studies at Harvard University and author of Colored People:
- A Memoir.]
- </p>
- <p> Here's the difference this time around. It's not that there
- are black artists and intellectuals who matter; it's that so
- many of the artists and intellectuals who matter are black.
- It's not that the cultural cutting edge has been influenced
- by black creativity; it's that black creativity, it so often
- seems today, is the cultural cutting edge. But be advised: the
- idea of a black American renaissance has a long and curious
- history, having been declared at least three times before in
- this century.
- </p>
- <p> Writing in 1901, the distinguished black critic and poet William
- Stanley Braithwaite argued, "We are at the commencement of a
- `negroid' renaissance," one that "will have as much importance
- in literary history as the much-spoken-of and much-praised Celtic
- and Canadian renaissance." Others came to share his optimism.
- Just three years later, a critic declared the birth of the "New
- Negro Literary Movement." At the time, after all, the poet Paul
- Laurence Dunbar, the novelists Pauline Hopkins and Charles Chesnutt,
- and the essayists W.E.B. DuBois and Anna Julia Cooper were at
- the height of their creative powers. So this was no reckless
- appraisal.
- </p>
- <p> A couple of decades later, it was the "Harlem Renaissance" that
- would lay the best-publicized claim to the word. This highly
- self-conscious movement was born largely through the midwifery
- of Alain Locke, the first black Rhodes scholar. Writers such
- as Langston Hughes, Jean Toomer, Countee Cullen, Jessie Fauset
- and Zora Neale Hurston--the fundaments of the black literary
- canon today--came of age at this time, leading the New York
- Herald Tribune to announce in 1925 that America was "on the
- edge, if not already in the midst, of what might not improperly
- be called a Negro renaissance."
- </p>
- <p> For Locke and his fellow authors, the point of a cultural renaissance
- was inherently political; it was thought that the production
- of great art by sufficient numbers of blacks would lead to the
- Negro's "re-evaluation by white and black alike." This re-evaluation
- would, in turn, facilitate the Negro's demand for civil rights
- and for social and economic equality. But the Harlem Renaissance
- was heavily dependent upon white patronage; after the stock
- market crash of 1929, it never regained its footing. Besides,
- the writers of the movement were really a tiny group, numbering
- perhaps 50, who, in Locke's view, represented "the Negro's cultural
- adolescence." Not only were their dreams of political advancement
- to remain unfulfilled, but in terms of formal literary achievement,
- they mostly failed to raise their art to its adulthood.
- </p>
- <p> The third renaissance was the Black Arts Movement, which extended
- from the mid-'60s to the early '70s. Defining itself against
- the Harlem Renaissance and deeply rooted in black cultural nationalism,
- the Black Arts writers imagined themselves as the artistic wing
- of the Black Power movement. Amiri Baraka, Larry Neal and Sonia
- Sanchez viewed black art as a matter less of aesthetics than
- of protest; its function was to serve the political liberation
- of black people from white racism. Erected on a shifting foundation
- of revolutionary politics, this "renaissance" was the most short-lived
- of all. By 1975, with the Black Arts Movement dead, black culture
- seemed to be undergoing a profound identity crisis.
- </p>
- <p> Almost two decades later, black writers and artists, musicians,
- dancers and actors find themselves in an era of creativity unrivaled
- in American history. The current efflorescence may have begun
- with the literature and criticism by black women published in
- the early '80s, especially the works of Ntozake Shange, Michele
- Wallace, Alice Walker and Toni Morrison. These women, and those
- who came later, were able to reach both the traditional large
- readership, which is middle class, white and female, and a new
- black female audience that had been largely untapped and unaddressed.
- </p>
- <p> Assigning a single starting date for an upsurge in creativity
- is an exercise in arbitrariness: the year 1987 will do as well
- as any. That was when August Wilson's Fences premiered on Broadway
- and Toni Morrison published her masterpiece, Beloved. Both would
- receive Pulitzer Prizes. In that same year, PBS aired Henry
- Hampton's Eyes on the Prize, the six-part documentary on the
- civil rights era, and Cornell scholar Martin Bernal published
- Black Athena, a highly controversial account of African sources
- of classical Greek civilization. Meanwhile, Spike Lee and Wynton
- Marsalis were establishing themselves as masters of film and
- jazz.
- </p>
- <p> The new energy among black artists is related to economic developments.
- First of all, the rise of a black middle class has provided
- for black art a market that is independent of whites. Then there
- are the institutional factors. Blacks now have a significant
- presence as agents, editors and reviewers. Blacks run and own
- record companies. They produce films, back concerts. The old
- "black talent--white management" pattern has finally started
- to break down.
- </p>
- <p> But economic circumstances have done more than just alter the
- roles of blacks as consumers and producers of art. They have
- also influenced the very nature of the new black art. For African
- Americans, it is the best of times and the worst of times: America
- has the largest black middle class and the largest black underclass
- in its history. The current achievements in black culture are
- unfolding against this conflicting socioeconomic backdrop. Despite
- remarkable gains, a sense of precariousness haunts the new black
- middle class and the art it creates and takes to heart. The
- economic advancement remains newfound and insecure. Hence the
- new black art displays a peculiar love-hate relation to the
- defiant culture of the inner city: an anxious amalgam of intimacy
- and enmity. Beneath it all is the black bourgeoisie's deep-seated
- fear that they're only a couple of paychecks away from the fate
- of the underclass.
- </p>
- <p> In some ways it is a fissure that runs through much black art
- of this century. One school of representation has focused on
- man as the subject of large, impersonal forces--racism, sexism,
- poverty. The other has dwelt on a transcendent self in which
- fulfillment is achieved despite these forces. Black art today
- represents an uncanny convergence of the two schools, and so
- replicates the class tensions within a black America that sees
- itself as both an object of a baneful history and the author
- of its own history. The buppie and the B-boy represent two salient
- cultural styles that are, in the end, less at odds than many
- assume.
- </p>
- <p> Today's black arts scene is characterized by an awareness of
- previous black traditions that the new artists self-consciously
- echo, imitate, parody and revise in acts of "riffing" or "signifying"
- or even "sampling." It's a movement that has come to define
- itself by its openness--a cultural glasnost. Hence a zest
- for parodies and an impatience with sacred cows, as with George
- Wolfe's play The Colored Museum, or Rusty Cundieff's movie Fear
- of a Black Hat, a satire of hip-hop posturing.
- </p>
- <p> This is an art that thrives on uncertainty, like much work of
- our Postmodernist times, but it also displays confidence in
- the legitimacy of black experiences as artistic material. Black
- artists seem to have become more conscious of their cultural
- traditions even as they have met with unprecedented mainstream
- success. Discarding the anxieties of a bygone era, these artists
- presume the universality of the black experience.
- </p>
- <p> They also know, however, that the facts of race don't exhaust
- anybody's human complexity. And that seems to be the enviable
- privilege of the new black artists--today's Post-Mod Squad.
- In its openness, its variety, its playfulness with forms, its
- refusal to follow preordained ideological line, its sustained
- engagements with the black artistic past, today's artistic upwelling
- is nourished by the black cultural milieu, but isn't confined
- to it.
- </p>
- <p> If the mission of these black artists succeeds, the very need
- to declare a "renaissance"--an always anxious act of avowal--may be unnecessary. Which means that today's may truly be
- the renaissance to end all renaissances.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-