Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Essence Magazine at Black Love Lives Conference


Essence magazine Relationship editor to host the Black Love Lives Conference - University of Pennsylvania 3.16.13Is this email not displaying correctly?
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The Black Love Lives Conference

Saturday, March 16, 2013
The University of Pennsylvania
Houston Hall
3417 Spruce Street
Philadelphia, PA 19104


A day of inspirational and interactive workshops with leading experts providing tools, resources and strategies to fortify, build and maintain vibrant, loving and mutually fulfilling relationships.

We are pleased to announce that Charreah K. Jackson, the Relationships Editor at ESSENCE magazine will serve as the hostess for the conference and join our esteemed circle of experts:

Charreah K. Jackson – Host
Dewey and Cherron Thomas -  The Health & Wellness Lifestyle
Dr. Akosua Ali Sabree - Clear Communication the key to Harmonious Relationship
Dr. Derrick Campbell - Leading Your Marriage into the Promised Land
Dr. Latisha and William Webb - Discovering Intimacy on 6 Domains of the Authentic Self
Dr. Naketa Thigpen - Keeping the Love Afloat
Kyle D. Morris - Love in the Social Media Age
Mo Stegall – Love in the Social Media Age
Redi Williams - Love in the Social Media Age
Ricardo Suber - Love in the Social Media Age
Muneer Abdul Hameed –Get Moving! A Physical Transformation
Nisa Muhammad – Pathways to Wedded Bliss
Nwasha and Montsho Edu - The Sacred Science of SoulMating
Ras Ben - The Power of Contentment in a Media-saturated World
Wayne B. Chandler –Heightening your personal power and power of attraction

"The goal of the Black Love Lives film, Conference and Black Love Awards is to contribute to healing in African American families and communities and to highlight and celebrate positive African American couples/relationships that serve as an inspiration for all," says Nisa Ra, film producer and conference organizer.

LOVE. HEAL. GROW.
Workshops
Complimentary Lunch
Black Love Awards Presentation
Cocktail Reception
Black Love

ESSENCE Magazine Editor to Host Conference

Charreah K. Jackson

Charreah K. Jackson is a certified family life educator and the Relationships Editor at ESSENCE magazine. Charreah provides relationships workshops and coaching nationwide and is a featured love expert on VH1, WEtv, CNN’s Headline News and the Huffington Post.

The Black Love Lives Resource Guide

BE INCLUDED!

This insightful souvenir guidebook will be produced for attendees of The Black Love Lives Conference and  will be a keepsake  representing a valuable collection of progressive businesses, services, practitioners, restaurants, social venues,  educational institutes and proponents of healthy lifestyles.

For more information on placing your ad, pleasevisit BlackLoveLives.com

GROUP RATES

Bring your school, social or religious group to begin the personal and relationship transformation!  For group rates, contact:press@blacklovelives.com

VOLUNTEER

We need dedicated volunteers leading up to and on site at the conference.  Interested?press@blacklovelives.com


MEDIA INQUIRIES

For more info, press credentials  and interview requests, contact: press@blacklovelives.com
Copyright © 2013 Black Love Lives, All rights reserved.
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Our mailing address is:
Black Love Lives
BlackLoveLives
PhiladelphiaPa 19143

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Monday, February 25, 2013

Oakland's New Deputy Mayor Sandre Swanson


New Deputy Mayor Swanson to continue his career after mayor's term ends

New Deputy Mayor Sandre Swanson
New Deputy Mayor Sandre Swanson
Sandre Swanson is not ready to give up on politics.

Despite being termed out of the California State Assembly, the new deputy mayor of Oakland said this won't be his last political rodeo.

"Before I left the Assembly, I said that four years from now, when Senator Loni Hancock has served her turn, that I would considerrunning for the (state) senate," he said.

Swanson is a long time politician with a pedigree resume. Before his election to the state assembly, Swanson served five years as Congresswoman Barbara Lee’s chief of staff after working for 25 years as the district director and senior policy advisor to former Congressman Ron Dellums. Swanson held his state assembly seat for six years.

Swanson's recent appointment as deputy mayor keeps his political career humming while he waits for the state senate seat to open up.

"That would be four years from now, two years after (Mayor Jean Quan) finishes this term," he said. "So I'm committed to this term for the mayor."

Like most of the leading city officials, he said he will focus much of his energy around the city's crime problem.

"I think Oakland is at a very serious crossroad," he said. "We are having what I like to call an historic crime wave. As a community it is incumbent upon us and moral imperative that we come together as a community and address this."

Former Alameda Vice Mayor Rob Bonta won Swanson's seat in November. Bonta said Swanson is a perfect fit as Oakland's deputy mayor.

"He's a leader," Bonta said. "He fights for social safety net programs that are critical for many Californians."

Swanson, who has a 30 year friendship with Quan, said he admires the work she has done as the mayor of Oakland.
"I feel from a historic point, she's probably one of the hardest working mayors that the city has ever had," he said.

Swanson said that although he is good friends with Quan, he has no plans to hold back when giving policy advice.

"I'm not an inexperienced young advisor," he said. "I'm a seasoned veteran and it's been my job to tell those senior elected officials when they are wrong."

Swanson said that in his political work he has carried with him an adage from his grandfather.

"My grandfather told me, 'Son whatever you do, follow your passion'. And my passion has been public service," he said. "I believe that it is an honorable service and it's a service that can bear significant fruit for the people."

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Beyond White Supremacy Thinking


Yes, we can: Non-European thinkers and philosophers

Walter Mignolo weighs in on the debate on the relative strength's of Eurocentric and non-Eurocentric philosophy.
Last Modified: 19 Feb 2013 11:34


While Zizek may be the most important European philosopher today, his work is less relevant for many people than the work of other philosophers like Lewis R Gordon, Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Wang Hui and Enrique Dussel [Getty]
The exchanges between Santiago Zabala and Hamid Dabashi published in Al Jazeera brings about one of the crucial issues of the 21st century: the increasing process of re-westernisation (the revamping of Western ways of thinking, from Christianity to Liberalism and Marxism), de-westernisation and decoloniality in all sphere of life, politics, economy, religions, aesthetics, knowledge and subjectivity.
The exchange focuses mainly in the last two. The exchange was prompted by Zabala's article on the role of the philosopher celebrating Slavov Zizek. In his response, Dabashi took up on the meaning differential between the names of Western philosophers and the countries where non-European philosophers are supposed to dwell or "come from" to Euro-US academy. 
Zabala's responses to Dabashi opted to emphasise Zizek's refreshing Communism. I will focus on the issues that emerge in the borders of the exchange. I am, after all, a border and decolonial thinker.
Beliefs in hierarchies 
The response by Hamid Dabashi to Zabala's article on the role of the philosopher, contributed to the circulation of the piece in areas of the public domain where it would not have otherwise been circulated. Dabashi's response was a reflection on the initial paragraph of said article on Zizek written by Santiago Zabala.
There are many important and active philosophers today: Judith Butler in the United States, Simon Critchley in England, Victoria Camps in Spain, Jean-Luc Nancy in France, Chantal Mouffe in Belgium, Gianni Vattimo in Italy, Peter Sloterdijk in Germany and in Slovenia, Slavoj Zizek, not to mention others working in Brazil, Australia and China. 
Dabashi's strategy parallels his argument: he doesn't mention the name of the article's authors. Dabashi's silence brings to the foreground the meaning of naming. His response is a sign among many that we, on the planet, are living a change of epoch rather than in an epoch of changes. The change of epoch is announced, in the sphere of knowledge, in the process of delinking from long lasting effects of epistemic colonial and imperial differences.
According to this frame, Native Americans have wisdom and Anglo-Americans science; Africans have experience and Europeans philosophy; the Third World has culture and the First World social sciences, including anthropology who study the cultures of the Third World; Chinese and Indians have traditions, Europeans modernity; Islam dwells in religion, Europeans in secularism.
Those beliefs in such hierarchies are gone among a growing number of non-European scholars, intellectuals, thinkers, activists. This is for me the implicit call made by Dabashi.
What non-European thinkers think 
I read Zabala's article on the role of the philosopher not because I am interested in Zizek (I am not), but because it was Santiago's article. We coincided in several conferences over the past three years, listened to each other, talked to each other and established an email correspondence and exchange of articles.
Talk to Al JazeeraSlavoj Zizek
My readings of continental philosophy are not in search of guiding lights to deal with issues of non-European histories, but an interest in what are "they" thinking, what are "their" concerns, what are "they" up to.
I spend most of my time engaged with non-European thinkers. It is from the light and guidance I've found in non-European thinkers that, when necessary, I engage with European philosophers. One example is "A Leftist Plea for 'Eurocentrism'" (1998).
I read this article not because it was written by Zizek, but because it was on Eurocentrism. I am always first and foremost interested in the problem, and secondly, in what people confronting the problem have to say about it. As a non-European thinker, my senses reacted to the first sentence of Zizek's article:
When one says Eurocentrism, every self-respecting postmodern leftist intellectual has as violent a reaction as Joseph Goebbels had to culture - to reach for a gun, hurling accusations of proto-fascist Eurocentrist cultural imperialism. However, is it possible to imagine a leftist appropriation of the European political legacy? 
I discussed this article in more detail elsewhere. Here I am just interested in underlying one point. My response to that paragraph, published in a couple of places, is the following:
When one says Eurocentrism, every self-respecting decolonial intellectual has not as violent a reaction as Joseph Goebbels had to culture - to reach for a gun, hurling accusations of proto-fascist Eurocentrist cultural imperialism. 
A self-respecting decolonial intellectual will reach instead to Frantz Fanon: "Now, comrades, now is the time to decide to change sides. We must shake off the great mantle of night, which has enveloped us, and reach, for the light. The new day, which is dawning, must find us determined, enlightened and resolute. So, my brothers, how could we fail to understand that we have better things to do than follow that Europe's footstep." 
With these comments, I do not intend to dispute Zabala's evaluation of Zizek as a philosopher. What I am saying is that we, decolonial intellectuals, if not philosophers, "have better things to do" as Fanon would say, than being engaged with issues debated by European philosophers.
Relevance is not universal 
The question raised by Dabashi is not new among us, thinkers of the ex-Third World (even if some or many of us are based in the US). Saying that it is not new, I am not implying that Dabashi's response is outdated. I mean that the issues at hand were debated in Africa, the Caribbean and South America at least since the late 50s and 60s. But they were debated "among us" and not "with them".
Now the differential of epistemic power has begun to be debated among "us" both, non-European thinkers and European philosophers. The exception in the domain of diplomacy was Kishore Mahbubani who raised the issue in his polemical book Can Asians Think? (1999).
Now, if we want to use the term "philosophy" to identify thinkers whether European and non-European, I would say that while Zizek may be the most important European philosopher today, his work is less relevant for many people than the work of Jamaican philosopher Lewis Ricardo Gordon; Iranian philosopher Seyyed Hossein Nasr; Chinese philosopher Wang Hui; Egyptian Nawal El Saadawi; and Latin American philosopher Enrique Dussel.
And if behind Zizek there is Derrida in continental philosophy, behind Gordon is Fanon in Africana philosophy; behind Seyyed Hossein Nasr is Ali Shariati in Muslim philosophy, behind Wang Hui there is Liu Xun in Chinese philosophy, behind El Sadawi the legacies of Muslim falsafa and behind Dussel is Rodolfo Kusch in Latin American philosophy.
Relevance is not universal, but depends on the universe of meaning and the belief system under which relevance is determined. We have here a pluriversal world of thinkers and philosophers in the process of de-westernising and decolonising the imperial legacies of Western philosophy.
The question of philosophy in the non-European world has been and is a vexing one. African and Latin American thinkers trained in philosophy debated, around the 1970s, this crucial question: "Is there an African/Latin American philosophy?" This question would have been unthinkable in Germany during the same years.
Robert Bernasconi, elaborating on African-American philosopher Lucius T Outlaw, summarised the dilemma as follows:
Western philosophy traps African philosophy in a double bind: either African philosophy is so similar to Western philosophy that it makes no distinctive contribution and effectively disappears; or it is so different that its credentials to be genuine philosophy will always be in doubt. (Bernasconi 1998, 188;Postcolonial African Philosophy: A Critical Reader). 
This is simply the entanglement and the puzzle that tormented thinkers with an academic training in philosophy in Africa, South America and the Caribbean.
Communism is an option 
All of the above take me to the question of communism, which is the focus of Zabala's response, the four powerful antagonisms that - according to Zizek - could prevent capitalism's indefinite reproduction:
1. "The looming threat of ecological catastrophe."
2. "The inappropriateness of the notion of private property for so-called 'intellectual property'."
3. "The socio-ethical implications of new techno-scientific developments (especially in biogenetics)."
4. "New forms of apartheid, new walls and slums."
In the past two decades, I have heard a lot about the four points mentioned by many different people, if not philosophers, serious thinkers and doers. I am not suggesting that Zabala is saying that Zizek is original in thinking about these issues, but that is it very important that Zizek is bringing these issues to the European philosophical debate. For it would be an unnecessary arrogance to think that the world, particularly the non-European world, needs Zizek to tell us that the world is on fire.  
Inside StoryDemanding 'economic justice'
For Zabala, "Being a communist in 2012 is not a political choice, but rather an existential matter. The global levels of political, economic and social inequality we are going to reach this year because of capitalism's logics of production not only are alarming, but also threaten our existence."
Now, recognising the problems doesn't mean that the only way to go is to be communist. However, as we know from history, the identification of the problem doesn't mean that there is only one solution. Or better yet, we can coincide in the prospective of harmony as a desirable global future, but communism is only one way to move toward it.
There cannot be only one solution simply because there are many ways of being, which means of thinking and doing. Communism is an option and not an abstract universal.
At the same time, it is necessary to recognise that, in Europe, communism is one strong option. Perhaps not the option for immigrants from Asia and Africa (perhaps yes for migrants from Latin America, mostly of European descent) would choose or that Tariq Ramadan (European Muslim and Muslim philosopher) will promote.
But certainly, it is an unavoidable choice in Europe: it was in Europe, after all, that communism originated.
In the non-European World, communism is part of the problem rather than the solution. Which doesn't mean that if you are not communist, in the non-European world, you are capitalist.
The point of reference in this debate was and continues to be the Bandung Conference, convoked by Sukarno in 1955. The legacy of Bandung is neither capitalism nor communism but decoloniality and de-westernisation (which means, delinking from both capitalism and communism.)
A case in point today would be Bolivia. The Bolivian State formula "Communitarian socialism" is rejected by CONAMAQ (Consejo Nacional de Ayllus y Markas del Qullasuyu), an organisation led by Aymaras and Quechuas, who are working on the reorganisation of Ayllus and Markas of Tawantinsuyu.
I do not have space here to explain what all of this means (which is precisely a problem of Eurocentrism - occupying space and silencing whatever doesn't fit the interest of the European, from the right or from the left), but basically it means that there is a way of being based on the communal, on the prospect of harmony grounded in the history of Andean civilisations and not in European history.
So the fact that Zizek, and other European intellectuals, are seriously rethinking communism means that they are engaging in one option (the reorientation of the Left) among many, today, marching toward the prospect of harmony overcoming the necessity of war; overcoming success and competition which engender corruption and selfishness, and promoting the plenitude of life over development and death.
Building harmonious future
In sum, the exchanges of ideas - in this publication - between Santiago Zabala and Hamid Dabashi, brings to the foreground a fundamental issue in building global and harmonious futures. There is a parallel between the growing convictions of the failure of neo-liberalism in the non-European world that parallels the growing conviction of limits (at the same time the value) of continental philosophy.
Sartre summarised it all in his prologue to Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth (1961), when he states, addressing a French and European audience, "listen, pay attention, Fanon is no longer talking to us".
Walter D Mignolo is William H Wannamaker Distinguished Professor and Director of the Center for Global Studies and the Humanities, Duke University. His most recent book, The Darker Side of Western Modernity: Global Futures, Decolonial Options (2011, Duke UP) is the third of a trilogy that includes The Darker Side of the Renaissance: Literacy, Territoriality and Colonization (1995, Michigan UP) and Local Histories/Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges and Border Thinking (2000, Princeton UP).
The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Black Love Lives Conference, Philly, March 16, 2013

Meet the Black Love Doctors: The Expert Presenters at The Black Love Lives Conference 3.16,13

THE BLACK LOVE LIVES CONFERENCE
March 16, 2013
9:00am – 5:00pm
Houston Hall
University of Pennsylvania
3417 Spruce Street
Philadelphia, PA 19107

The Black Love Lives Conference will be presented at The University of Pennsylvania on Saturday, March 16, 2013 in an effort to encourage strong families, healthy relationships and healing in the African American community.

The conference will utilize dynamic workshops facilitated by leading experts aka 'The Black Love Doctors' who will address transformational mental, physical, spiritual, and emotional aspects of sustaining lasting relationships.


"We received an overwhelming number proposals from presenters across the country and selected those we felt would provide a diverse transformational experience for individuals and couples.  These 'Black Love Doctors" are the experts doing the important and groundbreaking work of healing in our communities," says Nisa Ra, conference organizer and director of the documentary that inspired the event, Black Love Lives.

A selection of presenters and their workshops below.  The full schedule will be posted on www.blacklovelives.com.

Dr. Derrick L. Campbell

Workshop: Leading Your Marriage into the Promised Land


Dr. Akosua Ali-Sabree

Workshop: Clear Communication the key to Harmonious Relationship

Kyle Morris, Mo Stegall, Ricardo Suber, The Royal Flyness

Workshop: Love & Social Media

Dr. Naketa Thigpen
Workshop: Passing Ships- Keeping the Love Afloat

Montsho & Nwasha Edud

Workshop: Akoma Day: the Sacred Science of SoulMating

William Webb & Dr. Latisha Webb

Workshop: Keep Black Love Alive: Demystifying Sexuality & The Impact of Trauma

Nisa Muhammad

Workshop: Why Marriage? Tips to wedded bliss
Copyright © 2013 Black Love Lives, All rights reserved. 

Friday, February 22, 2013

BLACK REVOLUTION ON CAMPUS & THE ROOTS OF BLACK STUDIES



Left of Black S3:E19 | The Black Revolution on Campus & the Roots Black Studies

In January of 1969,  WCBS-TV in New York City began to broadcast a series of half-hour lectures under the banner of Black Heritage: A History of Afro-Americans.  The series, which ran six days a week until June of 1969 (108 episodes in all), was produced by historians John Henrik Clarke, Vincent Harding and political scientist William Strickland—the later two who were founding members of the Institute of the Black World, a groundbreaking thinking tank that was based at the Atlanta University Center.  According to historian Martha Biondi, by providing “ordinary Americans access to the Black history courses beginning to be offered on college campuses…these men personally bridged the gap between scholarship and activism.”

Left of Black is proud to be of the many progeny of this visionary project, born during an era in which Black student activism on American college campuses helped transform institutions that less than a generation earlier, Black students were largely denied access to.  This moment is chronicled in Martha Biondi’s new book The Black Revolution on Campus (University of California Press).  A historian at Northwestern University, Biondi joins Left of Black via Skype to talk about what she describes as “an extraordinary chapter in the modern Black freedom struggle.”  Biondi is also the author of To Stand and Fight: the Struggle for Civil Rights in Postwar New York City (Harvard University Press, 2003).

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Obituary for John Henry Doyle, Theatre Master


Photo: SFRT PSA - 
John Doyle has left this early plane:
The world is a little emptier tonight, a giant has left us. He always told me I was going to miss him one day, it's not even over and I do already....as a contemporary (which he would never admit), teacher, mentor, friend and brother...this day will not go quietlyObituary for John Henry Doyle

John H. Doyle has been a prolific figure in theatre community since 1969. On February 20, 2013 at the age of 65 he passed away.

John attended Laney Junior College then later transferred to San Francisco State University. In 1970 he earned a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Drama; then obtained his Teachers Credential from UC Berkeley.

He taught and led workshops in several community centers, theatres, and academic institutions, including: San Francisco State University, Laney Junior College, City College of San Francisco, Berkeley High School, and San Francisco School for the Performing Arts.

He also directed for numerous companies: American Conservatory Theatre, Oakland Ensemble Theatre, Julian Theatre, Black Repertory Theatre, and Lorraine Hansberry Theatre, etc… He was devoted to training actors and mounting plays that expressed the concerns of the black community. One of his major accomplishments was training renowned actor Danny Glover.

John received several awards, including: Bay Area Critic Award, honors at the Northern California Collegiate Theatre Festival, Zellerbach Family Grant to develop a Third World Playwright Workshop, California Arts Council and Northern Endowment for the Arts Grant, and a Berkeley Arts Fund Grant to start a Multi-Cultural School for the Performing Arts.

John was born in Rizal, Manila to Mary & Henry Doyle, now deceased. He is survived by three sons, one brother, five sisters, four grandchildren, one sister-in-law & one brother-in-law, as well as numerous nieces and nephews.

“I lost not only my brother-but my best friend”, Robert Doyle said.

Viewing is Friday, March 1, 2013 from 5-8 p.m. at Chapel of the Chimes, 4499 Piedmont Avenue in Oakland, CA. Memorial Service is March 2, 2013 at 11 a.m. at Chapel of the Chimes.





For theatre historians, a lot of Bay Area black theatre history has died with the transition of  John Henry Doyle, to say nothing of Stanley Williams and Quinten Easter of the Loraine Hansberry Theatre. In Boston, playwright Ed Bullins is fragile after suffering a fall that included partial loss of memory. I am  presently organizing the Community Archive Project to educate people to value their archives, just as important as the archives in the libraries of Timbuktu that were recently ransacked and set afire by Islamic Vandals. Imagine the Black theatre history John Doyle departed here with! Were his archives thrown into the dustbin of history?
A giant genius has left us down here on the ground. John H. Doyle was a master theatre man who continued in the tradition of Black Arts West and the national Black Arts Movement. Perhaps his greatest contribution to Bay Area Theatre was producing and directing the plays of another national genius, Ed Bullins. He also directed a version of my One Day in the Life at the Malonga Arts in Oakland. We love you, John Henry Doyle!
--Marvin X, Black Arts Movement


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Stanford Univ. BSU Conference



STANFORD UNIVERSITY'S
14TH ANNUAL 
BCSC/BSU  YOUTH EMPOWERMENT CONFERENCE
 "MOVE: Making Ourselves Voices of Empowerment"

Along with keynote speaker Lissa L. Jones, performances, a college student panel, and a tour of Stanford University, the program seeks to  empower Black youth through conversations surrounding identity and acceptance, effective leadership, and tips for success from Stanford students and others.

Please forward this email to any high school student, school group or community organization you think may be interested in attending the conference. We expect to reach maximum capacity! 

$20.00 registration includes conference, t-shirt, breakfast, and lunch for each student. 

To receive discounted hotel lodging at the Stanford Guest House, use code 1304YOUTH.
Lodging details available here

 


AFRO HORN @ S.O.B.s with special guests Steve Turre and Cubanos

Afro Horn and Marvin X will perform at the Schomburg in Harlem, Friday, Feb 22, in tribute to Elizabeth Catlett Mora