Chauncey Bailey Book Fair
Saturday, February 19,
12 noon til 6pm
Joyce Gordon Gallery
14th and Franklin, Oakland
Youth reading at the Academy of da Corner
"Crack a book before you're booked for Crack!"
--Paul Cobb, Publisher, Post Newspaper Group
In celebration of Black History Month, the Oakland Post Newspaper is
co-sponsoring the Journal of Pan African Studies Poetry Festival and Chauncey Bailey Book Fair, Saturday, February 19, 12 noon until 6pm, at the Joyce Gordon Gallery, 14th and Franklin Streets, downtown Oakland.
The JPAS is an online journal of Pan African literature. Marvin X is Guest Editor of the recent poetry issue and Bay Area poets will read their selection at the Joyce Gordon Gallery.
The Chauncey Bailey Book Fair is in honor of slain Oakland Post Editor Chauncey Bailey who loved literature and tried to educate youth. Paul Cobb, Post Newspaper Group Publisher, is asking persons to buy a collection of books by the authors for donation to juvenile hall, Santa Rita County Jail and San Quentin Prison.
Bay Area writers/artists/activists salute slain journalist Chauncey Bailey at
Journal of Pan African Studies Poetry Festival
and
Chauncey Bailey Book Fair
12 Noon until 6pm
JPAS Poetry Reading 3pm-6pm
Saturday, February 19th
Joyce Gordon Gallery
14th and Franklin
Oakland
Authors/Vendors contact Marvin X: jmarvinx@yahoo.com
Marvin X, Guest Editor
Journal of Pan African Studies
--Amiri Baraka
An excellent collection of poetry from some of the best poets in America. The best selection of poems that any Guest Editor has ever put together!--Rudolph Lewis, Editor, Chickenbones.com
Pull Yo Pants Up fada Black Prez and Yosef
essays on Obama Drama
Marvin X
Pan African Studies
Poetry Reading
Al Young, California Poet Laureate Emeritus
Eugene Allen, Reader's Theatre
Paradise Jah Love, poet, Reader's Theatre
TuReadah Mikell
Hunia, Reader's Theatre
Ptah Allah El, poet, author Tainted Soul, Professor, Academy of da Corner
Marvin X and Dr. Dorothy Tsuruta, Professor of Ethnic Studies at
San Francisco State University, a co-sponsor of this event. Black Studies
went to college and came home to community! (See Ptah's poem in JPAS.
She was one of his professors at SFSU who gave him a grounding in Black literature.)
Ayodele Nzingha, Professor of Arts, Academy of da Corner
PhD. candidate
author Exploring the African Centered Paradigm
J. Vern Cromartie
Not pictured: Kwan Booth, Charles Blackwell, Niyah X, Maisha, Nykimbe, Aries Jordan
Joyce Gordon Gallery
14th and Franklin, downtown Oakland
Sponsored by:
Oakland Post Newspaper Group
Academy of da Corner Reader's Theatre
San Francisco State University Ethnic Studies Department
Sponsors
Post Newspaper Group
An Academy of da Corner Reader's Theatre
Black Bird Press
Ed Howard, Kakakiki, Inc., Slave System
Journal of Pan African Studies
Joyce Gordon Gallery
Refa One
Ethnic Studies Department, San Francisco State University
Oakland Local
It's About Time/Black Panther Archives
Eastside Arts/Black Arts Movement literary exhibit
Reginald James, The Black Hour
Media documentation: Gregory Fields, Adam Turner, Ken Johnson, Khalid Wajjib, Kamau Amen Ra, Gene Hazzard, Lee Hubbard, Wanda Sabir, Susan Merit, Davey D, KPOO Radio, San Francisco
Notes on the Journal of Pan African Studies
Poetry Issue
If one is serious about getting a precise understanding of the 1960s Black Arts Movement, the most radical artrs and literary movement in American history, that forced the inclusion of ethnic literature into academia, one must grab the recent Journal of Pan African Studies, Poetry Issue.
The issue has poems by some of the BAM major players (Baraka, Bullins, Madhubuti, Ya Salaam, Toure, and X, as well as essays and dialogue on the literary productions of BAM, the proposition that the genre called Muslim American literature is based on the BAM Islamic influence, with roots in Moorish Science, Nation of Islam, Sufic, Sunni and Yoruba influences, although the Yoruba is not explained yet self evident in the poetry.
There is discussion on the poetic mission, and in the BAM tradition it is argued that poetry is not an end within itself but a vehicle, a tool, a weapon in the arsenal of liberation, and most importantly, a tool of communication.
The poems are drums of Pan Africa, message to and from the God and gods, ancestors, the living and yet unborn. Entries are from Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Kenya, United Kingdom, South Korea, New Zealand and throughout the United States.
We tried to give a regional sample from the west coast, east coast, mid west and south. You will find a commonality of themes and concerns, freedom most of all, but listen carefully to the regional rhythms on the poetic drums.
Overall, it represents an alternative world view, the Pan African world view as opposed to the Eurocentric world view. It is the world view of the oppressed, yet the spiritually liberated for the poets are, if nothing else, free spirits that cannot be caged, whipped or defeated, for they say you can kill the revolutionary but can't kill the revolution, thus the word causes forward motion in the ocean of humanity, and such are the contents herein. Magic words, magic truths, wisdom and and prophesy.
It is obvious from the bios that most of the poets are trained in academia, whatever their other origins. For sure the nuances of language transcends traditional English, for it is a language rooted in decolonizaton and liberation. Thus, many of the poets are bilingual, making use of the master's tongue and the tongue of the masses.
The BAM theme of revolutionary consciousness is pervasive. Associate Guest Editor Ptah Allah El says this is the Bible for the 21 Century. So it is! Like Black Fire of the 60s, let it fire up a static situation with the word. Let the Pan African mind move a little closer to home.
--Marvin X
1/15/11
Authors/vendors contact Marvin X @ jmarvinx@yahoo.com
Journal of Pan African Studies is Online
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