Role Call:
A Generational Anthology of Social & Political
Black
Literature & Art
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“Role Call is the voice of a generation determined not only to change the way we write, but the way we live.”
—Pearl Cleage
ISBN: 0-88378-239-1
Price: $15.60
Pub. Date: October 2002
Specs: Paper, 500 pp.
"Welcome to the 21st Century" bids the
opening line of this literary "multimedia" experience,
brought to us by three leading black author-activists of the
post--Civil Rights Movement generation: Tony Medina, Samiya
A. Bashir, and Quraysh Ali Lansana. This collection of more
than three hundred poems, essays, paintings, photos and
mixed media representations features a myriad of voices of
the generation that bridges the gap between the children of
the Civil Rights Movement and those of the present hip hop
movement. Role Call is described by its editors as a
manifesto for this much maligned often misunderstood
generation, eager to shake off the fetters of society's
unflattering inaccurate labels. Its pages tell of a
generation that has bravely taken up the challenge passed
along by their forebears to fight for equality and justice.
Boldly taking on issues of race relations, popular
culture, sexuality, education, technology and the rise of
the prison industry, Role Call reflects the love for self,
family, and community necessary to any struggle for
equality. This diverse collection of dynamic voices and
visions tackles its subjects with fresh, sparse language,
rich imagery and passion for the issues and the work that
signal the arrival of a new Black Power--one that is
spiritually grounded, forged in multiple alliances, and
based on the credo that each of our experiences matter.
Praise for Role Call:
Nothing predictable here: no re-run, and no
ho-hum, neither. Role Call is news! Each of these
artists seriously means to wake up your brain and your body.
This is a break-through,
dareyoutobedumbenoughtosleepthroughwhatsfinallygoingon
exploration of stuff as varied as pain and ecstasy.
Oh, more than good news!
Word.
&mdashJune Jordan
Fanon said: To speak is to assume a culture, and to
bear responsibility for a civilization. These young
poets do just that with their humor, their hip hop/street
idioms, their love for selves and the language, their
abundance of information which they so generously share with
us. My brothers. My sisters. Welcome to this thing that we
do called poetry. Welcome to life.
&mdashSonia Sanchez
In these uncertain and unimaginably violent times,
many writers find themselves questioning the relevance of
the work they do. For the young writers in Role Call,
the question is moot. Their passionate voices are already
about the work of creating a new language, a wider context,
a deeper understanding and a more lasting peace. They
already know that silence equals death. Role Call is
the voice of a generation determined not only to change the
way we write, but the way we live.
&mdashPearl Cleage
Consider that anthos is the Greek
word for flower and logia the Greek word for collecting. Now
imagine a solitary author, laboring for months over a novel,
a story or a poem, cultivating it like a gardener who slaves
over a prizewinning African violet. Now imagine a florist
carefully pruning and arranging a collection of brilliantly
hued flowers, in other words, an anthology.
Editors Samiya A. Bashir, Quaraysh Ali Lansana and Tony
Medina have done just that in Role Call: A Generational
Anthology of Social and Political Black Literature and Art.
A weighty tome--a phat 512 pages--Role Call is divided into
seven sections that examine how the work of recognized and
emerging young black artists deal with race, ethnicity,
gender, sexuality and class, as well as the joy and pain of
being black in America.
&mdash
Black Issues Book Review
The editors are gifted writers as
well and have contributed evocative pieces with powerful
messages to the collection. I interpreted Samiya Bashir’s
"American Visa" with my Afro-Caribbean heritage on my
mind, and the multi-faceted question/answer that has plagued
our efforts to define our place here-as captives or
citizens-the first time I read it. On subsequent readings I
was struck by the effects of her metaphor of America as a
mistress, supplier of all we need to remain ignorant and
subservient. My feminist sensabities warred with the
admiration for her poignant portrayal of our contending.
Ms. Bashir held nothing back in her explosion of the
love/hate relationship between the source of our separatist
ideals and our internationalization of the conditioning of
the oppressor.
Role Call may seem overwhelming upon first examination.
It is a large volume of work but packs a powerful
punch down to the last detail and the intensity of its power
is conveyed in every word and image. I had to put it
down for brief intervals, but was always compelled to pick
it up again, reading and reviewing particular sections that
laid hard truths bare or caused me to consider the positions
on which I’d been raised and educated, about race, class and
politics in this country. During the first reading one is
made aware of the need for every human being’s involvement
in the struggle to bring about lasting change. By the time I
began reading the final sections, I was cognizant of the
integral part each voice must play in the call and answer to
action.
&mdash
A Gathering of the Tribes
Role Call does not offer a full spectrum of
every up and coming black artist, but it does a good job of
giving a cross-section of artists that will create the
echoes of tomorrow. Many of these artists are picking up the
torch from the culturally conscious artists of yesterday --
the painters, poets, and actors, heroes and 'sheroes' of the
black arts movement who worked hard to open up communication
amongst Blacks about what was going on and what should be.
The editors of "Role Call" are to be commended for their
diligence in finding some of the voices that will echo in
the young ears of tomorrow.
The voices and visuals of these artists have left an
indelible, transcendental impression upon me and I am better
for it. I hope that the artist who had the opportunity to be
included in this notable collection use it as an inspiration
to continue to work on their skills. While a few will
applaud, there are still many who are silent, waiting for
their growth as an artist. A good start is nothing more than
the first step.
&mdash
AALBC