Friday, March 9, 2018

Black Panther and North American African Conspicuous Consumption


Lexus' Genius Product Placement in Marvel's Black Panther Movie Highlights Growing Influence of African Americans' Buying Power


African Americans continue to have a supersized influence on the U.S. economy. By 2020 African Americans are projected to have a buying power of$1.5 trillion with a cumulative growth of 16% and a compound annual growth rate of 3% from 2015-2020, according to market research firm Packaged Facts in the report African-Americans: Demographic and Consumer Spending Trends, 10th E....
Skeptics about the cohort's financial clout have to look no further than the recent success of the 2018 blockbuster Marvel superhero movie Black Panther, which has enjoyed record shattering returns and which to date has grossed more than $900 million globally. The film was a surefire success almost from its creative inception and official announcement four years ago as the news sent a simmering excitement through a black community starved for more minority representation in comic book movies.
While Disney's Marvel Studios cheered the film's success, so too did car maker Lexus. Movie goers got a look at Lexus' new luxury LC coupe which is featured prominently in a major chase scene through the streets of South Korea. The scene marked two years of collaboration between Lexus and Marvel Studios.
Packaged Facts' research revealed that product placement in movies and television shows resonates with African-American consumers. For example, black consumers are more likely to remember the brand name product characters use in a movie and try products they have never tried before that they have seen in a movie. Seeing a product used in a movie is also more likely to reassure black consumers that the product is a good one. Furthermore, when African-American consumers are online or in a store and see a brand name product they recognize from a movie, they are more likely to buy it than its competitor.
Car manufacturers featuring their vehicles in comic book movies isn't anything new. However, as AutoNews.com states in an article, Lexus' multicultural marketing agency, Walton Isaacson, openly admits that the idea to for collaboration and product placement in Black Panther represented an opportunity to link the car maker with a cultural event. 
In addition to the product placement in film, Lexus leading up to the Black Panther release commissioned an original graphic novel, Black Panther: Soul of a Machine, featuring the LC 500 and a Lexus takumimaster craftsman as heroes.  And don't forget the Black Panther-themed Super Bowl ad for Lexus.
In the end it proved to be a shrewd strategy for Lexus. AutoNews.com reveals that there was "an explosion" of ad impressions across TV, social media, and in theater due to the film and the product tie-in. Further, in the week following Black Panther's domestic premiere on February 16, online searches for Lexus at shopping site Autotrader were up 15% from the previous week. Likewise, Autotrader revealed that online traffic for the LC 500 specifically was up 10%.
It's impossible to say how many of these searches were performed by African Americans, However, based on Packaged Facts' previously referenced research on the impact of product placement on African Americans combined with the fact that Lexus is already popular with minority consumers, it's fair to deduce at least a portion of the searches were by black shoppers.
Packaged Facts' data also revealed that African Americans are among the biggest car buyers in America. Between 2012 and 2015 spending by African-American consumers on new cars and trucks increased from $13 billion to $20 billion.  Further, the 51% increase in spending by black households on new automotive vehicles significantly outpaced the 27% increase registered by other households.  But it's not just new cars that get lots of love. Spending by African-Americans on used cars and trucks grew more than twice as fast as comparable expenditures by other consumers.
About the Report 
African-Americans: Demographic and Consumer Spending Trends, 10th Edition analyzes recent consumer spending and demographic trends for the African-American population in the United States. View additional information about the report, including purchase options, the abstract, table of contents, and related reports at Packaged Facts' website:https://www.packagedfacts.com/African-Americans-Demographic-10293172/.
About Packaged Facts 
Packaged Facts, a division of MarketResearch.com, publishes market intelligence on a wide range of consumer market topics, including consumer demographics and shopper insights, consumer financial products and services, consumer goods and retailing, consumer packaged goods, and pet products and services. Packaged Facts also offers a full range of custom research services.
For more essential insights from Packaged Facts be sure to follow us on Twitter and Google+. For infographics, tables, charts and other visuals, follow Packaged Facts on Pinterest.
Please link any media references to our reports or data to https://www.packagedfacts.com/.  
Press Contact:Daniel Granderson
240.747.3000
dgranderson@marketresearch.com

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Thursday, March 8, 2018

Addendum:The Psycholinguistic Deconstruction of the word Nisa as per Women in the film Black Panther

In the Arabic language, Nisa has two meanings depending on syllable stress. Nisa means woman in one definition and another syllable stress Nisa means forget her, i.e., to forget the woman. We are thankful for ancestor Imam Warith Din Muhammad for his lecture on Nisa, chiding men for forgetting women. Of course in the patriarchal mythology women are booty at best, i.e., the spoils of war. Females were often buried in the desert sands because they were of no value in the patriarchal society.

And yet, how ironic it was that the wealthy trade woman Khadijah economically uplifted the budding prophet Muhammad Ibn Abdullah when she put him over her resources and most importantly was the one who comforted him when the Angel Gabriel gave him divine revelations that overwhelmed him. He sought refuge in her and she encouraged him to pursue his divine mission.

Still, in the patriarchal society, Muhammad did his best to teach respect of women or Nisa, and taught men not to forget women. Although,  as per family, he admonished believers that Allah is first and foremost, "If your wives, children and the wealth you acquire are dearer to you than Allah, then wait until His command comes, and He guides not the unjust!"

As per plural marriage or polygamy, he said if you can't give justice and equality (and he said you never can) don't even try it. I bear witness the Prophet was right because I could not be just and equal in my polygamous marriages that were a total failure, especially  when I realized the women would never love each other. They didn't even like each other. One wife told me she would have loved her co-wife if I wasn't in the picture, since they were on a similar spiritual vibration. And even after I was separated from them both, they bought and sold from each other at the Berkeley Flea Market.

From the beginning of my polygamous life,  I focused on making my children of three mothers love and respect each other, even if the mothers could not do so, and in fact, taught hatred to my children in the typical manner of mothers in plural marriage no matter in America or Africa and elsewhere.

No matter, my children are closer than I know and are even secretive in their loving sibling relationships. Alas, often they keep hidden from me their deep love and respect for each other. My oldest son Marvin K said long ago, "We're all smart!" He thus acknowledges the DNA or genetic connection between his siblings. 

As per women in the film Black Panther, I neglected to note the most wonderful role they played.. Imagine, a woman military general, a woman scientist, an independent woman seeking to discover her bliss in the best manner of Joseph Campbell,  even though she was loved by and loved the king, but only submitted to him after he had his Osirian resurrection  Women were repeatedly shown as warriors, not to mention their awesome communal ritual powers as dispensers of wisdom. Their physical beauty alone was overwhelming, especially bald headed and locked and their costumes were an antidote to the dress of our women addicted to European-colonial dress.

For sure, African women executed power, beauty and intelligence that should inspire North American African women and all women to transcend the patriarchal mythology, whether African or European!
--Marvin X/El Muhajir
3/8/18

Film Screening: The Rise of Black Business in America by Anthony Brogdon of Detroit, MI

san francisco flyer.jpg

Save the date: Respect Hip Hop Exhibit at the Oakland Museum of California, March 24-August 12, 2018



 

Bay Area folks, don't miss the Respect Hip Hop Exhibit at the Oakland Museum of California, March 24-August 12, 2018. As per the Black Arts Movement as the foundation of Hip Hop, the archives of Marvin X and the Black Arts Movement will be displayed. FYI, the Museum is planning a permanent exhibit of the Black Power Movement, including the Black Arts Movement. The museum is discussing a partnership with Oakland's Black Arts Movement Business District, CDC, of which the museum is a venue in the district and a permanent exhibit of Oakland's Black radical political,cultural and economic history is vital to uplift those stuck in the low information vibration, says Marvin X. As a BAM/BAMBD co-founder, Marvin has begun meetings with the Oakland Museum to make the Black Power Exhibit a reality and homage to all those freedom fighters who gave selflessly their sweat, blood and tears. Marvin X says, "Oakland is one of the most radical cities in America, similar to Fallujah, Iraq, a city of resistance that was decimated by US forces. Oakland suffered the same decimation vie Cointelpro, Army, Navy, Marines, National Guard, local police, agent provocateurs and snitches. There were snitches who told of planned rebellions and simply reported on the Black Mood.   

".....Marvin X is a teacher of primeval knowledge, a knower of both street poetry and book poetry. In fact, he combines the two in a powerful way. Each verse is a teach act, each stanza--a class. His use of alliteration, rhymes, assonance, dissonance and free rhymes indicates he has absorbed the teachings of the academy. Yet, the street consciousness lying in the cut of its content links him directly to the poets of the new idiom called Rap." Of course critic James G. Spady placed Marvin X at the very foundation of Rap, whether conscious or unconscious, "When you listen to Tupac Shakur, E-40, Too Short, Master P or any other rappers out of the Bay Area of Cali, think of Marvin X. He laid the foundation and gave us the language to express black male urban experiences in a lyrical way!"--James G. Spady, Philadelphia New Observer Newspaper

Marvin X says, "Of all the rappers in the Bay who absorbed my spiritual energy, only Askari X can claim my crown! Askari, no matter his mental condition, took the torch of Black Islam and ran to the mountain top shouting, "Laeelahah, elaillah, Elijah Muhammad rassululah!" Askari X went on to honor his master teacher, Master J founder of the Ansaru Allah. But Askari recognized me as the reincarnation of Marcus Garvey and addressed me as Marcus Garvey. I recognized his talent as superior to Tupac or any other rappers. Not only could he sing but he had the Islamic mythology that made him stand taller than other rappers stuck on the low information vibration.

Askari X

Askari X

Biography

Askari X, aka Ansar El Muhammed and Ricky Murdock, is a hip-hop artist from Oakland, California. He has 3 albums and is on many compilation albums and as a guest on several albums. He is famous for coining the term RBG. Stic.man and M-1 of Dead Prez talk about Askari X often in music and credit him as one of their main musical influences.
Askari X is known for black power messages combined with spiritual Islamic themes. His lyrics have a message similar to Fred Hampton, Bobby Hutton, Marcus Garvey, Huey P. Newton, and Malcolm X, including the Black Panther mentality and political manifesto of Malcolm X: "by any means necessary." His sound is characterized by slow powerful drum beats and a flow similar to Tupac. His message is similar to rap artists Dead Prez, X-Clan, Immortal Technique, Public Enemy, and Steve B.I.K.O.
Askari X espouses a mixture of ideologies, one being that of a revolutionary, who uses carnal weapons and guns to obtain freedom, along the lines of the Black Panthers and the African People's Socialist Party. The other being that of s/c Black Islam (Teachings of thee Nation of Islam) as taught by Ansar El Muhammad, Thee Select One, thee ALLAH Master J, which is foundated on the teachings of Thee Messenger, Thee Glorious Most Honorable Elijah Muhammad, which strictly forbids the use of or even possession of guns or carnal weapons of any sort. Askari X also mixes in various levels glorifying the Thug culture, slang, even drug use at times, all with an intent of capturing the imagination of African American youth with audio imagery similar to the conditions they grow up in. As any movie script writer, director, or producer, Askari X without double standard could be innocent of any negative influence his songs may have on those who listen to his songs.
Askari X stands out from other revolutionary underground hip-hop artists with his powerful, blunt, and direct message in support of the black liberation struggle and for being one of the first artists of the RBG movement. Taking anti-racism to a militant level, Askari X supports a revolution against violent racism that matches the notorious aggression of the white supremacist movement. His genre could be identified as a conscious rap artist.

Black Bird Press News and Review Popular Posts 3/8/18



On Thursday, March 8, 2018, 1:33:06 PM PST, Marvin X Jackmon jmarvinx@yahoo.com [blackantiwar] wrote:


 
cover photo Alicia Mayo
cover design Adam Turner
INTRODUCTION
By Nathan Hare

With the return of “white nationalism” to the international  stage and the White House and new threats of nuclear war, the black revolutionary occupies a crucial position in society today. Yet a black revolutionary of historic promise can live among us almost unknown on the radar screen, even when his name is as conspicuous as Marvin X (who may be the last to wear an X in public view since the assassination of Malcolm X).
This semblance of anonymity is due in part to the fact that the black revolutionary is liable to live a part of his or her life incognito, and many become adept at moving in and out of both public and private places sight unseen. For instance, I didn’t know until I read Marvin X’s  “Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter” that when he put on a memorial service for his comrade and Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver, 1998, he was unaware that Eldridge’s ex, Kathleen Cleaver, had traveled from the East Coast and slipped into the auditorium of the church with her daughter Joju. As one of the invited speakers I had noticed her curiosity when I remarked that I had been aware of Eldridge before she was (he and I /had had articles in the Negro History Bulletin in the spring of 1962) and had met her before Eldridge did, when I was introduced to her while she was working with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee at Tuskegee institute, but luckily for Eldridge I was happily married to the woman who years later would escort Kathleen around San Francisco in what I recall as a failed search for a black lawyer to take his case when he returned from exile in France.
Like many other persons across this promised land, I also thought I knew Marvin X. I can clearly recall seeing him walk into the offices of The Black Scholar Magazine, then in Sausalito, with a manuscript we published in the early 1970s... However, his reputation had preceded him. For one thing, then California Governor Ronald Reagan had publicly issued a directive to college administrators at UCLA and Fresno State University to get Angela Davis and Marvin X off the campuses and keep them off.
Then over the years I continued to encounter him: when he organized the First National Black Men’s Conference, 1980, Oakland Auditorium, that drew over a thousand black men (without benefit of media coverage) to pay their way into a conference aimed at getting black men to rise again.  I was a member of his Board of Directors. I also attended a number of other conferences he organized, such as the Kings and Queens of Black Consciousness, San Francisco State University, 2001, and the San Francisco Black Radical Book Fair, 2004, as well as productions of his successful play, “One Day in the Life,”  with a scene of his last meeting with his friend, Black Panther Party co-founder, Dr. Huey P. Newton, in a West Oakland Crack house.
I will never forget the time he recruited me and the seasoned psychiatric social worker, Suzette Celeste, MSW, MPA, to put on weekly nighttime workshops in black consciousness and strategies for “overcoming the addiction to white supremacy.” On many a night I marveled to see him and his aides branch out fearlessly into the gloom of the Tenderloin streets of San Francisco and bring back unwary street people and the homeless to participate in our sessions, along with a sparse coterie of the black bourgeoisie who didn’t  turn around or break and run on seeing the dim stairway to the dungeon-like basement of the white Catholic church.
But when I received and read Marvin’s manuscript, I called and told him that he had really paid his dues to the cause of black freedom but regretfully had not yet received his righteous dues.
As if to anticipate my impression, the designer of the book cover has a silhouetted image of Marvin, though you wouldn’t recognize him if you weren’t told, in spite of the flood lights beaming down on him from above like rays directly from high Heaven, as if spotlighting the fact that Marvin ‘s day has come.
You tell me why  one of the blackest men to walk this earth, in both complexion and consciousness, is dressed in a white suit and wearing a white hat; but that is as white as it gets, and inside the book is black to the bone, a rare and readable compendium of Marvin’s unsurpassed struggle for black freedom and artistic recognition.
Black revolutionaries wondering what black people should do now can jump into this book and so can the Uncle Tom: the functional toms find new roles for the uncle tom who longs for freedom but prefers to dance to the tune of the piper; the pathological tom, whose malady is epidemic today, as well as the Aunt Tomasinas, can be enlightened and endarkened according to their taste in this literary and readable smorgasbord.
“Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X” is a diary and a compendium, a textbook for revolutionary example and experience, a guide for change makers, a textbook for Black Studies and community action, including city planners who will profit from his proposals and experiences in his collaboration with the mayor and officials of Oakland to commercialize and energize the inner city, with a Black Arts Movement Business District (BAMBD) that could be the greatest black cultural and economic boon since the Harlem Renaissance.  No longer just talk and get-tough rhetoric, his current project is cultural economics, Oakland’s Black Arts Movement Business District, an urban model evolving in real time in the heart of downtown Oakland, where people like Governor Jerry Brown once tried their hand before they turned and fled back into the claws of the status quo.


I can’t say everything is in this book, just that it reflects the fact that  Marvin, for all he has done on the merry-go-round of black social change, is still in the process of becoming.
Readers from the dope dealer to the dope addict to the progressive elite, the Pan African internationalist, the amateur anthropologist, the blacker than thou, the try to be black, the blacker-than-thous, the try to be white (who go to sleep at night and dream they will wake up white) and other wannabes; in other words from the  Nouveau Black to the petit bourgeois noir and bourgie coconuts, “Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X” is a fountainhead of wisdom, with a fistful of freedom nuggets and rare guidance in resisting oppression or/and work to build a new and better day.
Dr. Nathan Hare
3/8/18

 Dr. Nathan Hare, Father Black and Ethnic Studies, with his student, Marvin X
photo Adam Turner 

Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X
Introduction by Dr. Nathan Hare
Black Bird Press, Oakland, April, 2018
limited edition, signed
paperback
500 pages
$29.95
Pre-publication discount price $19.95
To pay by credit card, call 510-200-4164
email: mxjackmon@gmail.com

Black Bird Press News & Review: The Public Career of Marvin X by James G. Spady

Black Bird Press News & Review: The Public Career of Marvin X by James G. Spady



....Marvin X is a teacher of primeval knowledge, a knower of both street poetry and book poetry. In fact, he combines the two in a powerful way. Each verse is a teach act, each stanza--a class. His use of alliteration, rhymes, assonance, dissonance and free rhymes indicates he has absorbed the teachings of the academy. Yet, the street consciousness lying in the cut of its content links him directly to the poets of the new idiom called Rap.
--James G. Spady, Master Critic

Black Bird Press News Popular Posts 3/8/18

Black Bird Press News and Review Popular Posts 3/8/18

International Women's Day Summit: The Art of Embodying the Feminine

Date and Time



Location

4799 Shattuck Avenue
Oakland, CA 94609

International Women's Day 2018 "The Art of Embodying the Feminine Summit is a gathering for ambitious, driven, incredibly passionate women (like you!) to come together in the community and connect with powerful role models - women who are not afraid to be fierce without sacrificing their feminine. At a time where women are proclaiming ‘Time’s Up’ and ‘MeToo,’ and celebrating the recent images of Wonder Woman and the Dora Milaje in popular culture, this gathering is created with the intention to give back to the amazing women who stand for and lead their communities, yet never have a place where they can truly be themselves, where they can rest and recharge.

Through this gathering, you'll walk away feeling powerful not despite being a woman, but BECAUSE you are a woman. The evening will begin with a panel of incredible speakers on the topics of fierce femininity in career, relationships and motherhood, and end with a powerful collective experience that will leave you feeling empowered. Come connect and discover how to apply the power of the feminine in all areas of your life, and watch your world transform!

Order your tickets NOW or at the Door$20 - $50. see you there "March 9th" No one will be rejected because of ticket fees!

Date and Time



Location

4799 Shattuck Avenue
Oakland, CA 94609
View Map


 

For the Women, a poem by Marvin X

 

Black Arts Movement artist Elizabeth Catlett 


For the Women by Marvin X

 

https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh_LpNH5FrHbpOwwQ9wjikD2WuUotekSpn14mk9Ag-ibr1ebz3FnR83-mPmo_z9stw9KwHNRxmJ1g57C4j4VzvXIYjaFS2lOivefejhCRhfqPfcxF6y1Oim69aO7SQfiCd9iGUS91V7pzx5/s1600/FullSizeRender(1).jpgWomen Writers Panel at Black Arts Movement 50th Anniversary Celebration, Laney College, Oakland, Feb. 7, 2015. L to R: Elaine Brown, Halifu Osumare, Judy Juanita, Portia Anderson, Kujichagulia, Aries Jordan. Standing: Marvin X, BAM producer
photo South Park Kenny Johnson

                                          For the Women




For the women who bear children
and nurture them with truth
for the women who cook and clean
behind thankless men

for the women who love so hard so true so pure
for the women with faith in God and men
for the women alone with beer and rum
for the women searching for a man at the club, college, church, party
for the women independent of men
for the women searching their souls
for the women who do drugs and freak
for the women who love only women
for the women who play and run and never show
for the women who rise in revolt in hand with men
who say never, never, never again
for the women who suffer abuse and cry for justice
for the women happy and free of maternal madness
for the women who study and write

for the women who sell their love to starving men
for the women who love to make love and be loved by men
for the women of Africa who work so hard
for the women of America who suffer the master
for the women who turn to God in prayer and patience

 Dr. Ayodele Nzinga, Marvin X and Hunia

for the women who are mothers of children and mothers of men
for the women who suffer inflation, recession, abortion, rejection
for the women who understand the rituals of men and women
for the women who share
for the women who are greedy
for the women with power

for the women with nothing
for the women locked down
for the women down town
for the women who break horses
for the women in the fields
for the women who rob banks
for the women who kill
for the women of history
for the women of now
I salute you
A Man.
--Marvin X

Dr. Nathan Hare's Introduction to Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X

cover photo Alicia Mayo
cover design Adam Turner
INTRODUCTION
By Nathan Hare


With the return of “white nationalism” to the international  stage and the White House and new threats of nuclear war, the black revolutionary occupies a crucial position in society today. Yet a black revolutionary of historic promise can live among us almost unknown on the radar screen, even when his name is as conspicuous as Marvin X (who may be the last to wear an X in public view since the assassination of Malcolm X).
This semblance of anonymity is due in part to the fact that the black revolutionary is liable to live a part of his or her life incognito, and many become adept at moving in and out of both public and private places sight unseen. For instance, I didn’t know until I read Marvin X’s  “Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter” that when he put on a memorial service for his comrade and Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver, 1998, he was unaware that Eldridge’s ex, Kathleen Cleaver, had traveled from the East Coast and slipped into the auditorium of the church with her daughter Joju. As one of the invited speakers I had noticed her curiosity when I remarked that I had been aware of Eldridge before she was (he and I /had had articles in the Negro History Bulletin in the spring of 1962) and had met her before Eldridge did, when I was introduced to her while she was working with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee at Tuskegee institute, but luckily for Eldridge I was happily married to the woman who years later would escort Kathleen around San Francisco in what I recall as a failed search for a black lawyer to take his case when he returned from exile in France.
Like many other persons across this promised land, I also thought I knew Marvin X. I can clearly recall seeing him walk into the offices of The Black Scholar Magazine, then in Sausalito, with a manuscript we published in the early 1970s. However, his reputation had preceded him. For one thing, then California Governor Ronald Reagan had publicly issued a directive to college administrators at UCLA and Fresno State University to get Angela Davis and Marvin X off the campuses and keep them off. The Fresno Bee Newspaper quoted Reagan as he entered the State College Board of Trustees meeting in his capacity as president of the board, "I want Marvin X off campus by any means necessary!"
Over the years I continued to encounter him: when he organized the First National Black Men’s Conference, 1980, Oakland Auditorium, that drew over a thousand black men (without benefit of media coverage) to pay their way into a conference aimed at getting black men to rise again.  I was a member of his Board of Directors. I also attended a number of other conferences he organized, such as the Kings and Queens of Black Consciousness, San Francisco State University, 2001, and the San Francisco Black Radical Book Fair, 2004, as well as productions of his successful play, “One Day in the Life,”  with a scene of his last meeting with his friend, Black Panther Party co-founder, Dr. Huey P. Newton, in a West Oakland Crack house.
I will never forget the time he recruited me and the seasoned psychiatric social worker, Suzette Celeste, MSW, MPA, to put on weekly nighttime workshops in black consciousness and strategies for “overcoming the addiction to white supremacy.” On many a night I marveled to see him and his aides branch out fearlessly into the gloom of the Tenderloin streets of San Francisco and bring back unwary street people and the homeless to participate in our sessions, along with a sparse coterie of the black bourgeoisie who didn’t  turn around or break and run on seeing the dim stairway to the dungeon-like basement of the white Catholic church.
But when I received and read Marvin’s manuscript, I called and told him that he had really paid his dues to the cause of black freedom but regretfully had not yet received his righteous dues.
As if to anticipate my impression, the designer of the book cover has a silhouetted image of Marvin, though you wouldn’t recognize him if you weren’t told, in spite of the flood lights beaming down on him from above like rays directly from high Heaven, as if spotlighting  the fact that Marvin ‘s day has come.
You tell me why  one of the blackest men to walk this earth, in both complexion and consciousness, is dressed in a white suit and wearing a white hat; but that is as white as it gets, and inside the book is black to the bone, a rare and readable compendium of Marvin’s unsurpassed struggle for black freedom and artistic recognition.
Black revolutionaries wondering what black people should do now can jump into this book and so can the Uncle Tom: the functional toms find new roles for the uncle tom who longs for freedom but prefers to dance to the tune of the piper; the pathological tom, whose malady is epidemic today, as well as the Aunt Tomasinas, can be enlightened and endarkened according to their taste in this literary and readable smorgasbord.
“Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X” is a diary and a compendium, a textbook for revolutionary example and experience, a guide for change makers, a textbook for Black Studies and community action, including city planners who will profit from his proposals and experiences in his collaboration with the mayor and officials of Oakland to commercialize and energize the inner city, with a Black Arts Movement Business District (BAMBD) that could be the greatest black cultural and economic boon since the Harlem Renaissance.  No longer just talk and get-tough rhetoric, his current project is cultural economics, Oakland’s Black Arts Movement Business District, an urban model evolving in real time in the heart of downtown Oakland, where people like Governor Jerry Brown once tried their hand before they turned and fled back into the claws of the status quo.

I can’t say everything is in this book, just that it reflects the fact that  Marvin, for all he has done on the merry-go-round of black social change, is still in the process of becoming.
Readers from the dope dealer to the dope addict to the progressive elite, the Pan African internationalist, the amateur anthropologist, the blacker than thou, the try to be black, the blacker-than-thous, the try to be white (who go to sleep at night and dream they will wake up white) and other wannabes; in other words from the  Nouveau Black to the petit bourgeois noir and bourgie coconuts, “Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X” is a fountainhead of wisdom, with a fistful of freedom nuggets and rare guidance in resisting oppression or/and work to build a new and better day.
Dr. Nathan Hare
3/8/18


 Dr. Nathan Hare, Father Black and Ethnic Studies, with his student, Marvin X
photo Adam Turner 

Notes of Artistic Freedom Fighter Marvin X
Introduction by Dr. Nathan Hare
Black Bird Press, Oakland, April, 2018
limited edition, signed
paperback
500 pages
$29.95
Pre-publication discount price $19.95
To pay by credit card, call 510-200-4164
email: mxjackmon@gmail.com
Pre-publication discount price $19.95
pay by credit card, 510-200-4164
email: mxjackmon@gmail.com
Marvin X is now available for interviews and
readings coast to coast.
mxjackmon@gmail.com