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August Wilson and the African-American Odyssey.


Kim Pereira. August Wilson August Wilson (April 27, 1945—October 2, 2005) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright.

Wilson's singular achievement and literary legacy is a cycle of ten plays—two of which won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama—dubbed "The Pittsburgh Cycle".
 and the African-American Odyssey. Urbana: U Illinois P. 1995. 123 pp. $29.95 cloth/$12.95 paper.

Critical discourse on August Wilson's dramatic agenda is now well underway. Fueled by the prolific playwright's current critical acclaim and the ever-increasing attention his controversial views command, discussions of his plays and his politics continue to escalate. Such attention has not always been accorded the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner. A few scholarly commentaries, such as Mei-Ling Ching's "Wrestling Against History" and Philip Smith's "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom: Playing the Blues as Equipment for Living," surfaced during the late 1980s. But Wilson's work has since sparked even greater interest among academics, especially following the CBS (Cell Broadcast Service) See cell broadcast.  Hallmark Hall of Fame televised version of The Piano Lesson in February 1995. Recently, August Wilson's body of work has become a fertile area for scholars in areas such as theatre, cultural studies, African

American literature, music, art, and the like.

What is so extraordinary about August Wilson's work is that it invites a wide range of interpretations and, much to the pioneer researcher's delight, is still open to much more intellectually challenging and innovative discourse. Already Alan Nadel and Marilyn Elkins have assembled an array of incisive critical perspectives on Wilson in their recently published collections "May All Your Fences Have Gates": Essays on the Drama o[ August Wilson and August Wilson: A Casebook A printed compilation of judicial decisions illustrating the application of particular principles of a specific field of law, such as torts, that is used in Legal Education to teach students under the Case Method system. . And I have offered the first comprehensive study of the playwright in The Dramatic Vision of August Wilson.

Now Kim Pereira joins the growing list of pioneer scholars mining this terrain with a very insightful thematic discussion of four of Wilson's best known plays. August Wilson and the African-American Odyssey explores themes of separation, migration, and reunion in Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, Fences, Joe Turner's Come and Gone Joe Turner's Come and Gone is a play by August Wilson, a Pulitzer Prize-winning American playwright. The original working title of the play was Mill Hand's Lunch Bucket, the title of a painting by Romare Bearden. , and The Piano Lesson. Pereira's efforts throughout this study--which began as his dissertation project at Florida State University--are threefold: to demonstrate how Wilson transforms these three historical forces into symbolic indicators of an entire race's quest for personal and cultural identity, to point out the correlation between the evolution of black music in America and African Americans' quest for affirmation, and to demonstrate Wilson's insistence that his characters are all "Africans in America."

Of the many themes that permeate Wilson's work, Pereira's concentration on the long-range toll that slavery, the Emancipation Proclamation Emancipation Proclamation, in U.S. history, the executive order abolishing slavery in the Confederate States of America. Desire for Such a Proclamation
, and the Great Migration have taken on African Americans is essential to understanding what is at the center of the playwright's dramatic agenda. Like Herald Loomis, the nomad nomad (nō`măd'), one of a group of people without fixed habitation, especially pastoralists. (Some authorities prefer the terms "nonsedentary" or "migratory" rather than "nomadic" to describe mobile hunter-gatherers.  protagonist of Joe Turner's Come and Gone, who knows the importance of determining one's "starting place" or one's identifying point of origin, Kim Pereira, in August Wilson and the African-American Odyssey, cuts through the myriad of themes operating in Wilson's four major plays to reveal those that form the foundation of his dramatic agenda. Pereira assesses these patterns of restlessness by closely analyzing the prevalence of dislocation, constant movement, and occasional reunion as reflected in various aspects of the four selected plays. In fact, these same themes occur to a lesser degree in each of the other three plays that comprise his ongoing ten-play project: Jitney Jitney

1. A situation in which one broker who has direct access to a stock exchange performs trades for a broker who does not have access.

2. A fraudulent activity in the penny stock market involving two brokers trading a stock back and forth to rack up commissions and give
!, Two Trains Running, and Seven Guitars, his most recent play.

In conveying the prevalence and function of these themes in the four selected plays, Pereira draws upon an impressive knowledge of black music and African lore to situate sit·u·ate  
tr.v. sit·u·at·ed, sit·u·at·ing, sit·u·ates
1. To place in a certain spot or position; locate.

2. To place under particular circumstances or in a given condition.

adj.
 each work within a realistic historical context. Yet despite the relevance of the blues and images of Africa to Pereira's assertions, at times he overindulges the reader with excessively long asides that detract from his focus upon separation, migration, and reunion. His analysis also loses a great deal of its focus when his close reading of the plays' texts begin to lapse into elaborate plot summaries and undue attention to obvious details.

Nevertheless, Pereira's close reading may prove helpful (especially for the novice Wilson audience or reader) in uncovering the many layers of meaning Wilson's plays offer. Pereira is at his best in his discussion of Joe Turner's Come and Gone--deemed by some spectators and critics alike to be one of Wilson's most difficult plays. Pereira's detailed analysis provides welcome insight for those who, for example, do not concur with the playwright's stated mission to make his characters recognizably African. Here, Pereira's knowledge of African lore proves particularly useful in bringing to light the play's potentially obscured African context. His assessment of Bynum, the play's conjurer, exemplifies this:

Bynum owes his mythological ancestry to the If a tradition--whose presiding

deity is Orunmila--in Yoruban cosmology, his sharply tuned intuition appears

to endow him with the gift of divination divination, practice of foreseeing future events or obtaining secret knowledge through communication with divine sources and through omens, oracles, signs, and portents. , particularly when it come to

sensing which relationships need consolidation. His is the oracular o·rac·u·lar  
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or being an oracle.

2. Resembling or characteristic of an oracle:
a. Solemnly prophetic.

b. Enigmatic; obscure.
 voice

from which the other characters seek affirmation and

solutions, the steadying influence in this world of upheaval.

Pereira not only describes each of the characters in Joe Turner as conceivably African, but he also provides sound evidence to support Africa's rich presence in various images, such as Loomis's nightmarish vision of floating bones and the ritualistic rit·u·al·is·tic  
adj.
1. Relating to ritual or ritualism.

2. Advocating or practicing ritual.



rit
 juba dance performed by boarding-house tenants. Moreover, Pereira diffuses the play's subtext sub·text  
n.
1. The implicit meaning or theme of a literary text.

2. The underlying personality of a dramatic character as implied or indicated by a script or text and interpreted by an actor in performance.
, rife with tension from the seemingly explosive opposite religious ideologies of African spiritualism spiritualism: see spiritism.
spiritualism

Belief that the souls of the dead can make contact with the living, usually through a medium or during abnormal mental states such as trances.
 and Christianity, asserting that "this play is an Afro-Christian tapestry woven with threads from both traditions. In various ways the characters seek self-affirmation through constant spiritual renegotiations between symbols and customs of African and Christian mythology." Rather than regard the two religions as diametrical di·a·met·ri·cal   also di·a·met·ric
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or along a diameter.

2. Exactly opposite; contrary.



di
 opposites, he sees them as inseparable, indeed complementary, in African American culture African American culture or Black culture, in the United States, includes the various cultural traditions of African American communities. It is both part of, and distinct from American culture. The U.S. .

As a welcomed addition to the growing field of scholarship on August Wilson, August Wilson and the African-American Odyssey provides a helpful "starting place" for understanding the thrust of the playwright's mission.
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Author:Shannon, Sandra G.
Publication:African American Review
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 1997
Words:953
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