Tuesday, April 27, 2010

A look at what I got so far

(Im pretty much done with the essay. Can you please look over my essay and tell me what I should correct or add to improve my essay.)

Artistic and Political Manifestos

During the 1960’s and 1970’s many artistic and political manifestos were written calling for change in the Black Community. These manifestos were works of art that offer a statement of belief and opinion about how things should be. Larry Neal wrote an artistic manifesto envisioning what black arts should be like, while The Black Panther Party wrote a political manifesto envisioning extreme change in the Unites States government.

Larry Neal’s manifesto, “The Black Arts Movement,” is manly about what art should express. He believes that art should be about ethics instead of aesthetics. It should be about what is going on in society, values, and morals. He argues that art shouldn’t be about beauty. He explains how Western society tends to use art as entertainment instead of art that is useful for people in the community. This art enforces the idea of the white people’s way of looking at the world. As he states in the second paragraph:

Therefore, the main thrust of this new breed of contemporary writers is to confront the contradictions arising out of the Black man’s experience in the racist West. Currently, these writers are re-evaluating Western aesthetics, the traditional role of the writer, and the social function of art. Implicit in this reevaluation is the need to develop a “black aesthetic.” It is the opinion of many Black writers, I among them, that the Western aesthetic has run its course: it is impossible to construct anything meaningful within its decaying structure.

In this part he is saying that western aesthetics does not value African Americans and that it is racist and alienates them. New writers are questioning this art and they are acknowledging that this art doesn’t support them. Therefore, they believe that this art is done and that they will create new art that represents them. He want African Americans to create new art that would stand for what they believe in and value. As Neal states, “The Black artist must create new forms and new values, sing new songs (or purity old ones); and along with other Black authorities, he must create a new history, new symbols, myths and legends (and purify old ones by fire).” Since western ideas of art don’t represent them, they should create art that does. Artistic text that Larry Neal would be in favor of is the poem “Black Art” by LeRoi Jones because it talks about how a poem is not a poem unless it talks about realistic, everyday issues in society. He does not want poems that talk about love when African Americans are treated unequal and the Vietnam War is going on. Like he states, “Let there be no love poems written until love can exist freely and cleanly.”

The Black Panther Party was an African American organization trying to improve the conditions of the black people during the mid 1960’s and 1970’s. Their “10 Point Platform” is a manifesto where they are calling for extreme change for the black community. Their Platform includes political and economical change. Some of their requests are power to determine their own destinies. They wanted to have their own representatives that have the interest of the black people. They wanted freedom for all the African Americans that were held in prison because they did not receive a fair trial and wanted all African Americans to be free from from the military service. They wanted the right to a decent education. They also wanted economical rights, such as decent housing and employment. As the 10th point explains, “We want land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice and peace. And as major political objective, a United Nation-supervised plebiscite to be held throughout the black colony in which only black colonial subjects will be allowed to participate for the purpose of determining the will of the black people as to their national destiny.” The Black Panther Party would be in favor of the Young Lords Party’s “13-Point Program and Platform” because just like the Black Panther Party they are setting exactly what they want to be changed. They both have similar point such as withdraw from military and freeing prisoners that were tried unfairly. They both also want their people to be educated about their own culture.

Both Larry Neal and the Black Panther Party are responding to similar issues faced by many African Americans since they were written only two year apart. Larry Neal’s manifesto was published in the summer of 1968. A lot was going on in the world during this time. Many assassinations against black leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. were taken place. The Vietnam War was as still going on. Many troops were being killed and it seemed like The United States were going to lose the war. Many whites and Blacks are starting to oppose the war. There is still a lot of racism going on in the country. African Americans are still put down even in art. Many countries in Africa and Asia are being decolonized. This might have led Larry Neal to write this text because he is expressing that African Americans have their own history and beauty that must be shown and not oppressed by western aesthetics. Just like these countries are coming out and decolonizing, so should black art come out and represent African Americans. The Black Panther Party’s 10 Point Platform is written in 1966. I can see why they choose to write this manifesto because with all the injustice going on in society, they wanted to rebel against it and express that should be different. Like the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party attempted to do by trying to form their own political party in the interest of the Black community.

I find the Larry Neal manifesto more persuasive because it is an interesting idea of using art in a way to make a different instead of are being used as just beauty. Why should art be about western values when so much is going on in the world that needs to be addressed and changed? Therefore, I would like to join Larry Neal artistic movement. The Black Panther Party have a good list of what they want to change and why, but I believe they are asking for too much at once. They are not only asking for political right, but economical rights as well. Even whites do not have some of these economical rights they are asking for in the capitalist economy of the United States. This makes is much harder to achieve all their goals.

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Post #5

Part of my essay:

Larry Neal’s manifesto, “The Black Arts Movement,” is manly about what art should express. He believes that art should be about ethics instead of aesthetics. It should be about what is going on in society, values, and morals. He argues that art shouldn’t be about beauty. He explains how Western society tends to use art as entertainment instead of art that is useful for people in the community. This art enforces the idea of the white people’s way of looking at the world. As he states in the second paragraph:
Therefore, the main thrust of this new breed of contemporary writers is to confront the contradictions arising out of the Black man’s experience in the racist West. Currently, these writers are re-evaluating Western aesthetics, the traditional role of the writer, and the social function of art. Implicit in this reevaluation is the need to develop a “black aesthetic.” It is the opinion of many Black writers, I among them, that the Western aesthetic has run its course: it is impossible to construct anything meaningful within its decaying structure.
In this part he is saying that western aesthetics does not value African Americans and that it is racist and alienates them. New writers are questioning this art and they are acknowledging that this art doesn’t support them. Therefore, they believe that this art is done and that they will create new art that represents them. He want African Americans to create new art that would stand for what they believe in and value. As Neal states, “The Black artist must create new forms and new values, sing new songs (or purity old ones); and along with other Black authorities, he must create a new history, new symbols, myths and legends (and purify old ones by fire).” Since western ideas of art don’t represent them, they should create art that does.

The Black Panther Party was an African American organization trying to improve the conditions of the black people during the mid 1960’s and 1970’s. Their “10 Point Platform” is a manifesto where they are calling for extreme change for the black community. Their Platform includes political and economical change. Some of their requests are power to determine their own destinies. They wanted to have their own representatives that had the interest of the black people. They wanted freedom for all the African Americans that were help in prison because they did not receive a fair trial and wanted all African Americans to be free from from the military service. They wanted the right to a dissent education. They also wanted economical rights, such as decent housing and employment. As the 10th point explains, “We want land, bread, housing, education, clothing, justice and peace. And as major political objective, a United Nation-supervised plebiscite to be held throughout the black colony in which only black colonial subjects will be allowed to participate for the purpose of determining the will of the black people as to their national destiny.”

Post #4

1) The black Art poem was a poem that really stood out because it shows a feeling of anger overall. What I understood is that poems are not important unless they are talking about the real issues of the society and how he is tired of reading poems about love when so much violence is going on in society. I think this is a political art work because it talking about the conditions and violence of the Black community and the Vietnam War. This poem relates to the kind of art Larry Neal calls for because is talking about the community rather than art that ignores social issues and uses art as beauty and entertainment.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Third Post

Larry Neal’s manifesto is calling for writing that is related to the interest of the black community. He is against any art that has to do with western values because it alienates African Americans. He wants people to create new art and destroy the old one. The old art follows the white idea and ways of looking at the world. He believes it time to write about the truth and important things. He sees arts as a part of a movement because by making art that relates to what is important and issues in society will bring these problems to light. Instead of making art that related to western values that ignores these problems. During 1968, Martin Luther King Jr. was murdered and the US gets involved in the Vietnam War. Since more problems were raising and many people were dying in this war it became more and more important to make art about this issues instead of ignoring them.

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Second blog post

My initial reaction of “strange Fruit” is that it’s a very powerful song. I selected this song because I like the way the writer uses a fruit as a metaphor of dead bodies of African Americans hanging from trees. I also like his use of irony when he represents the south as the “gallant south”. The secondary source that really compares to the song is “The Case Stated”. Both works are talking about how common it was to lynch African Americans. The story explains how the whites are always making up excuses to murder African Americans. The first excuse was that they started race riots and then it was that they had to stop African Americans from voting. The last excuse was that African Americans were raping white women. It says that during these years more than ten thousand African Americans have been killed. It also explains how there was a great injustice in the system. As she states, “for all these murders only three white men have been tried, convicted, and executed”. They both shed light on the other because the song is showing a visual image of the lynching and the story is explaining why whites did it and how unfair the government was.