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Flyboy 2

The Greg Tate Reader

Greg Tate

$55

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English
Duke University Press
05 August 2016
Since launching his career at the Village Voice in the early 1980s Greg Tate has been one of the premiere critical voices on contemporary Black music, art, literature, film, and politics. Flyboy 2 provides a panoramic view of the past thirty years of Tate's influential work. Whether interviewing Miles Davis or Ice Cube, reviewing an Azealia Banks mixtape or Suzan-Lori Parks's Topdog/Underdog, discussing visual artist Kara Walker or writer Clarence Major, or analyzing the ties between Afro-futurism, Black feminism, and social movements, Tate's resounding critical insights illustrate how race, gender, and class become manifest in American popular culture. Above all, Tate demonstrates through his signature mix of vernacular poetics and cultural theory and criticism why visionary Black artists, intellectuals, aesthetics, philosophies, and politics matter to twenty-first-century America.

By:  
Imprint:   Duke University Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   499g
ISBN:   9780822361961
ISBN 10:   0822361965
Pages:   368
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  ELT Advanced ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
"Introduction: Lust, of All Things (Black)  1 1. The Black Male Show Amiri Baraka  9 Wayne Shorter  16 Jimi Hendrix  24 John Coltrane  41 Gone Fishing: Remembering Lester Bowie  44 The Black Artists' Group  50 Butch Morris  55 Charles Edward Anderson Berry and the History of Our Future  57 Lonnie Holley  68 Marion Brown (1931–2010) and Djinji Brown  71 Dark Angels of Dust: David Hammons and the Art of Streetwise Trancendentalism  73 Bill T. Jones: Combative Moves  78 Garry Simmons: Conceptual Bomber  81 The Persistence of Vision: Storyboard P  83 Ice Cube  91 Wynton Marsalis: Jazz Crusader  102 Thonton Dail: Free, Black, and Brightening Up the Darkness of the World  110 Kehinde Wiley  124 Rammellzee: The Ikonoklast Samurai  127 Richard Pryor: Pryor Lives  136 Richard Pryor  146 Gil Scott-Heron  149 The Man in Our Mirror: Michael Jackson  152 Miles Davis  158 2. She Laughing Mean and Impressive Too Born to Dyke: I Love My Sister Laughing and Then Again When She's Looking Mean, Queer, and Impressive  167 Joni Mitchell: Black and Blond  175 Azealia Banks  177 Sade: Black Magic Woman  180 All the Things You Could Be by Now If Iames Brown Was a Feminist  186 Itabari Njeri  193 Kara Walker  196 Women at the Edge of Space, Time, and Art: Ruminations on Candida Romero's Little Girls  202 Ellen Gallagher  208 To Bid a Poet Black and Abstract  210 ""The Gikuyu Mythos versus the Cullud Grrrl from Outta Space"": A Wangechi Mutu Feature  213 Come Join the Hieroglyphic Zombie Parade: Deborah Grant  219 Björk's Second Act  223 Thelma Golden  228 3. Hello Darknuss My Old Meme Top Ten Reasons Why So Few Black Women Were Down to Occupy Wall Street Plus Four More  235 What Is Hip-Hop?  239 Intelligence Data: Bob Dylan  242 Hip-Hop Turns Thirty  246 Love and Crunk: Outkast  252 White Freedom: Eminem  254 Wu-Dunit: Wu-Tang Clan  256 Unlocking the Truth vs. John Cage  260 4. Screenings Spike Lee's Bamboozled  265 It's A Mack Thing  270 Sex and Negrocity: John Singleton's Baby Boy  272 Lincoln in Whiteface: Jeffrey Wright and Don Cheadle in Susan-Lori Parks's Topdog/Underdog  275 The Black Power Mixtape  278 5. Race, Sex, Politricks and Belle Lettres Clarence Major  285 The Atlantic Sound: Caryl Phillips's The Atlantic Sound  288 Acocalypse Now: Patricia Hill Collins's Black Sexual Politics; Thomas Shevory's Notorious H.I.V.; Jacob Levenson's The Secret Epidemic  290 Blood and Bridges  292 Nigger-'Tude  296 Triple Threat: Jerry Gafio Watts's Amiri Baraka; Hazel Rowley's Richard Wright; David Macey's Frantz Fanon  299 Bottom Feeders: Natsuo Kirino's Out  306 Scaling the Heights: Maryse Condé's Windward Heights  307 Fear of a Mongrel Planet: Zadie Smith's White Teeth  310 Adventures in the Skin Trade: Lisa Teasley's Glow in the Dark  313 Generous Hexed: Jeffery Renard Allen's Rails under My Back  315 Going Underground: Gayl Jones's Mosquito  317 Judgment Day: Toni Morrison's Love and Edward P. Jones's The Known World  320 Black Modernity and Laughter, or How It Came to Be That N*g*as Got Jokes  322 Kalahari Hopscotch, or Notes toward a Twenty-Volume Afrocentric Futurist Manifesto  330 Sources  343 Index  347"

Greg Tate is a music and popular culture critic and journalist whose work has appeared in many publications, including the Village Voice, Vibe, Spin, the Wire, and Downbeat. He is the author of Flyboy in the Buttermilk: Essays on Contemporary America and Midnight Lightning: Jimi Hendrix and the Black Experience and the editor of Everything but the Burden: What White People Are Taking from Black Culture. Tate, via guitar and baton, also leads the conducted improvisation ensemble Burnt Sugar the Arkestra Chamber, who tour internationally.

Reviews for Flyboy 2: The Greg Tate Reader

Gathered here we have a body of work a generation in the making that will certainly shape our thinking, listening, and seeing for generations to come. Greg Tate is the standard-bearer; his critical sensibilities are matched only by his ability to render them in stunning prose. The power and charisma of his intellect emanate from the page. In the tradition of Ellison and Baraka, but unlike them, shaped by the best of Black feminism, Tate forges his own brilliant path. -- Farah Jasmine Griffin The premier hip-hop writer of his generation, a stunning prose stylist, and the inventor of a whole new approach to music and cultural criticism, Greg Tate has been to hip-hop what Albert Murray is to jazz: the standard-setter for a generation of intellectuals who care deeply about race, art, and the future. -- Ann Powers Tate has been an important if underread critic for the past several decades, and this collection will allow more readers to discover him. Not a fast or simple read, but a worthwhile one for fans of music and culture. -- Craig L. Shufelt Library Journal Flyboy 2 will be like no other collection of writing you will read this year, and probably this decade. Refer back to the original Flyboy book to whet your palate, and to note and compare the evolution of Tate's voice and his perception of the world and music around him. Take comfort in knowing that there is a Black writer who has no choice but to be real, poised and dignified, denying all pressures to bastardize the class and power of Black arts criticism and literary excellence. -- Jordannah Elizabeth Amsterdam News Whether you are new to his work or a longtime reader, the universe of Black magic lovingly curated in Flyboy 2 will do your soul good. -- Steven W. Thrasher The Guardian Flyboy 2 is an immersive, fluid, and genre-bending collection of commentary, essays, and exposition of the self, a beautiful text solidly grounded in the critical theories of late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century academia. -- Patty Comeau ForeWord Reviews What Flyboy 1 and 2 show is that Tate has come a long way in the study of this, the feared black planet and, in so doing, came out a more skilful, more humble man. What his style won't let me forget is this: we are simultaneously in command of this world, and others. -- Kwanele Sosibo Mail & Guardian What made Tate's criticism special was his ability to theorize outward from his encounters with genius and his brushes with banality-to telescope between moments of artistic inspiration and the giant structures within which those moments were produced... Tate has a keen sense for the way that both artists and communities discern where they fit in the world, and what is expected of them, and then either go along for the ride or carefully plot their escapes. -- Hua Hsu The New Yorker [T]hought-provoking... There's lots to unpack in Tate's writing, challenging us to come along for the ride--if we're up to it. -- David Hershkovits Paper Magazine A Rolling Stone contributor, Greg Tate's ferocious, slang-tinged salvos and deep-rooted historical analysis have inspired readers and intimidated colleagues for decades. This sequel to the 1992 collection Flyboy in the Buttermilk felt particularly acute in the context of 2016's nonstop stream of racial horror, whether Tate is delineating visual artist Kara Walker's unflinching slavery-era silhouettes or eulogizing Richard Pryor and Michael Jackson... -- Michaelangelo Matos Rolling Stone


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