West Coast kinfolk: in Los Angeles, Chris Abani and Kamau Daaood stand out as strong limbs on the family tree of literature.Some in the creative family would have you think Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. writers are not serious because we craft in the shadow of a neon sign neon sign n → enseigne (lumineuse) au néon neon sign neon n → Neonreklame f neon sign n → that backlights caricatures for the world to see. Others dismiss us for our casual evening wear: our sandals at the literary salon. These critics aren't around to hear our alarm clocks calling us to the desk at 4:45 A.M. Others mock our quick smile, our open hand and hemorrhaging heart. We just lean back Verb 1. lean back - move the upper body backwards and down recline lean, tilt, angle, slant, tip - to incline or bend from a vertical position; "She leaned over the banister" fall back - fall backwards and down and say, "Love is a verb." In the spirit of love and reconciliation, let us consider this piece as a sort of family reunion Often an annual event, a family reunion takes place on a specified day each year for the purpose of keeping an extended family closer together. Some reunions may be held less often. of letters. Allow me to update for some and introduce to others two of your Left Coast kinfolk. A young lion and an elder. Both old souls, they help you get to know the writers in your family tree. Chris Abani Christopher Abani (or Chris Abani) (born December 27, 1966) is a Nigerian author. He is a Professor at the University of California, Riverside and the recipient of the PEN USA Freedom-to-Write Award, the Prince Claus Award, a Lannan Literary Fellowship, a California , Demon Hunter 2004 was a good year for Chris Abani. Graceland, his critically acclaimed second novel, published by Farrar, Strauss & Giroux, was named one of the best books of the year by the Los Angeles Times Los Angeles Times Morning daily newspaper. Established in 1881, it was purchased and incorporated in 1884 by Harrison Gray Otis (1837–1917) under The Times-Mirror Co. (the hyphen was later dropped from the name). Book Review. About his third collection of poetry, Dog Woman (also published in 2004, by Red Hen Press), poet Maurya Simon said, "Dog Woman is a mesmerizing mes·mer·ize tr.v. mes·mer·ized, mes·mer·iz·ing, mes·mer·iz·es 1. To spellbind; enthrall: "He could mesmerize an audience by the sheer force of his presence" , haunting and sometimes subversive exploration of the personal and cultural politics of power and disempowerment ... it's a daring, trailblazing trail·blaz·ing adj. Suggestive of one that blazes a trail; setting out in a promising new direction; pioneering or innovative: trailblazing research; a trailblazing new technique. and important book; it's a vital addition to the poetry of our times." This all came atop of 2003 when Abani won the prestigious Lannan Literary Fellowship and saw the publication of his second poetry collection, Daphne's Lot (Red Hen Press). In 2001, all he did was receive the Netherland's Prince Claus Award for Literature and Culture; the PEN Center USA West Freedom to Write Award, and the Middleton Fellowship, which granted him a full ride to the University of Southern California's (USC An abbreviation for U.S. Code. ) doctoral program in creative writing and literature. Chris Abani has paid the cost to be the boss. Abani wrote his first novel, Masters of the Board, at 16. When it was published in his native Nigeria in 1985, he was arrested for treason by the Nigerian regime of General Ibrahim Babangida. Abani was accused of masterminding the coup led by General Mamman Vatsa because the plot of Masters of the Board mirrored Vatsa's coup plot. He served six months in prison. "I didn't let my family know about the particulars of my arrest, I didn't want to endanger them," he says, sitting in the food court of USC. Abani is a heavyset heav·y·set adj. Having a stout or compact build. Adj. 1. heavyset - having a short and solid form or stature; "a wrestler of compact build"; "he was tall and heavyset"; "stocky legs"; "a thickset young man" man with a crooner's manner and soft voice. Wearing blue jeans blue jeans also blue·jeans pl.n. Clothes, especially pants, made of blue denim. blue jeans npl → tejanos mpl; vaqueros mpl and red shirt, he could be a sensitive defensive tackle for the USC-defending national-cochampion Trojan football team. Writing about the prison experience in his first collection of poetry, Kalakuta Republic Kalakuta Republic was the name musician and political activist Fela Kuti gave to the communal compound that housed his family, band members, and recording studio in Lagos, Nigeria. (Saqi Books, January 2001), he says, "This initial brush with the government was not deliberate on my part, but having once been brushed by the wings of the demon, I became the demon hunter." Two years later Abani was arrested again for his writing, and he was held for a year in Kiri-Kiri Maximum Prison (also known as Kalakuta Republic) where he was tortured extensively then released. "I'm not sure what they were thinking when they released me," he smiles. "That I would stop making art?" Two years later, his anticorruption play Song of the Broken Flute landed him on death row at Kiri-Kiri, with six months spent in solitary confinement solitary confinement n. the placement of a prisoner in a Federal or state prison in a cell away from other prisoners, usually as a form of internal penal discipline, but occasionally to protect the convict from other prisoners or to prevent the prisoner from causing . This was his punishment for leading a riot when his young cellmate cell·mate n. A person with whom one shares a cell, especially in a prison. , John James
John James (c 1673- 15 May 1746) was an architect particularly associated with Twickenham in west London, where he rebuilt St. Mary's Church and built the house for Hon. , was tortured to death at age 14. International pressure from human rights groups eventually secured Abani's Get Out of Jail Card--but it wasn't free: Sergeant Adam Barkin Zawa Rammed the barrel Of a rifle-Lee Enfield-up my rectum Maintaining casual banter' 'How is your mother? How is she finding our lovely country?' interrupted only / by the blood spraying from my backside, / baptizing his heavily scarified face, / empty ancient mask. Breath heavy with local gin--ogogoro--used / To scare demons, guilt, into lonely/Dark corners. --From Kalakuta Republic Art has served as both weapon and savior for Abani. Art helped him survive the horrors of the Kalakuta Republic. Telling those stories in verse helped him to document full, rich humanity under the most inhumane in·hu·mane adj. Lacking pity or compassion. in hu·mane ly adv. conditions."Art is essential," he says. "It's what is human in us. People have always tried to create narratives. Through stories, rock painting, sons. Trying to make sense of what it means to exist in this often-painful life, what it means to be human. Art becomes a way to meditate med·i·tate v. med·i·tat·ed, med·i·tat·ing, med·i·tates v.tr. 1. To reflect on; contemplate. 2. To plan in the mind; intend: meditated a visit to her daughter. the terror. It connects us. Like James Baldwin Noun 1. James Baldwin - United States author who was an outspoken critic of racism (1924-1987) Baldwin, James Arthur Baldwin said, 'Your pain has no meaning unless you can connect it with someone else's pain.'" Kamau Daaood: World Stage Kamau Daaood knows a little something about pain. You don't live 50 years in a black body and not know your way around deep heartache. When describing his chosen profession, he calls the poetic vocation, "Being wounded with a blessing." Like Abani, Daaood uses art to ease the pain. Sitting in his Leimert Park living room, you get a sense of the six-foot-four, bass-voiced man. "There's a lot of West Coast bashing," Daaood says plainly. "I think that's when a lot of the brothers and sisters from the East can't find home. They end up in some Hollywood scene and that begins to represent L.A. for them. But there's always been a pulse rooted in community that's a very serious and very progressive scene. Oftentimes, the visitors don't plug into that pulse." Daaood has not only been plugging into that pulse for decades, but he's been the red blood cells Red blood cells Cells that carry hemoglobin (the molecule that transports oxygen) and help remove wastes from tissues throughout the body. Mentioned in: Bone Marrow Transplantation red blood cells traveling through the veins. Daaood was one of the youngest members of the legendary Watt's Writer's Workshop. The 1960s era workshop was an incubator for Jayne Cortez, Stanley Crouch, K. Curtis Lyle, Ojenke, Eric Priestly, Quincy Troupe and many others transforming Watt's Riot embers into metaphors. "All the writers were very serious about their craft," Daaood says. "If you brought weak work, you heard about it. The first time that K. Curtis came to the workshop and read this poem someone snatched it out of his hand, and said, 'This is bullshit,' and threw it out the window. The next week he came back with a piece that was really strong," Daaood brought that tough love approach to Leimert Park when he cofounded the World Stage with master drummer Billy Higgins. The World Stage was a grassroots writer's workshop and jazz workshop that was designed to create and nurture artists in the Crenshaw cren·shaw also cran·shaw n. A variety of winter melon (Cucumis melo var. inodorus) having a greenish-yellow rind and sweet, usually salmon-pink flesh. [Origin unknown.] District. From poet Ruth Forman, novelist Jenoyne Adams to jazz drummer Willie Jones III, and vibraphonist Stefon Harris, the World Stage has set fire under a new breed of artists who have their feet set firmly in the community. In April of 2005, City Lights Publishers released The Language of Saxophone: Selected Poems of Kamau Daaood. The title is a riff on Los Angeles poets' long tradition of being intertwined with music. "The music has always had a strong impact on the poets," he says. "We filtered the experience of the '60s through the militancy and music of the times, through Coltrane's runs and honks. But not just the music of jazz, also the music of what we called the 'Sermonic Tradition' which we got from Ojenke, who got it from his father, Rev. Saxon. We tried to find the music in how the black preacher brought the rhythmic word to the people. Then we combined that with all the image-driven surrealist poetry we were reading and 'all the Pablo Neruda, all the Bob Kaufman. We put it all together and made it our own. "The school of poetry that came out of that period was marked by high-energy performance, rich with provocative images and steeped in musicality," he says. "The most well-known proponents of the style are probably Quincy Troupe and Jayne Cortez. And there are many very strong, younger poets who are out of that tradition but making it their own." These young poets are the legacy of Daaood because you can always tell the quality of the tree by the fruit it bears. In a way, The Language of Saxophones is Daaood's latest casting of seeds. "In this collection, in this book, I'm writing four decades of my life. Hopefully, there is some growth on display. Most of my work in the past was geared toward the live performance, serving the community in a specific time and place. A village artist as community artist. Like Ojenke used to say, 'I don't write poems on book pages, I write poems on hearts.'" This is a family lesson that we can 'all learn from elder Kamau Daaood. Let's try to find home in the heart of each other. Unswayed Adj. 1. unswayed - not influenced or affected; "stewed in its petty provincialism untouched by the brisk debates that stirred the old world"- V.L.Parrington; "unswayed by personal considerations" uninfluenced, untouched by geography or Fahrenheit, let's have a family reunion that makes love a verb down South, on the Eastside, the Westside and the Midwestside. Michael Datcher is professor of English at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, California. He is also the author of Raising Fences: A Black Man's Love Story (Penguin Group, February 2001). |
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