Saul Williams
Saul Williams is a Top 100 AALBC.com Bestselling Author Making Our List 9 Times
Biography of Saul Williams
Saul Stacey Williams (born February 29, 1972) is hailed as “a dreadlocked dervish of words … the Bob Marley of American poets … the Poet Laureat of Hip-Hop.” Saul Williams is a gifted young poet who is opening up this literary art form to a new generation of readers. Like his writing — a fearless mix of connecting rhythms and vibrant images — Saul Williams is unstoppable. He received raves for his performance as an imprisoned street poet in the Trimark Pictures release Slam, winner of the Camera d’Or at Cannes and the Grand Jury prize at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. The consummate spoken-word performance artist, Williams has also been signed by producer Rick Rubin to record a CD of his poetry.
Saul Williams also appeared in the award winning movie Lackawanna Blues.
    Tell me about the poem in this video.
	
	That poem is called “Coltan As Cotton.” Coltan is a precious stone that is 
	found in Central Africa, China and Russia, roughly the same places you find 
	diamonds. It is what distributes power in our cell phones and laptops. As 
	you can imagine, the stories around those coltan mines have a direct lineage 
	to the stories of rubber, sugar cane, iron, oil, gold, diamonds. We know how 
	those companies become rich: by exploiting natural resources, usually in the 
	third world, and how the power breaks down. This is a stone that distributes 
	power, like the distribution of wealth. I’m holding it in my hand as I talk 
	to you on my iPhone — we all have it.
	
	Martyr Loser King is someone who worked in a coltan mine before he became a 
	hacker. The question is, how do we break the cycle? Of course, there’s 
	nothing wrong about extracting minerals and using them to progress society, 
	but if the same sort of exploitation takes place on a regular basis, if it’s 
	the same people benefitting and the same people not benefitting. How do we 
	apply modern technology — meaning awareness and consciousness, because these 
	things are reflections of our consciousness — to the enrichment of society 
	or the eradication of poverty?
	
	That poem is simply things to ponder, things to question, things we need to 
	be thinking about as we step through life. What is the role of free labor 
	and slavery in the history of the bank? They’re not necessarily rhetorical 
	questions. It’s looking at history and not being overwhelmed by it, but 
	saying, okay, this is what we’ve built until now, this is what we should 
	keep, this is what we should destroy, this is what we should be protesting. 
	Figuring out how do I live my life, have fun, and do what I want to do, but 
	also finding ways to not always perpetuate the cycle. Because there’s no 
	real escape. Even for the so-called independent artist like me, I have deals 
	to publish books and distribute albums, and there are unanswered questions 
	about how these things will come about. We all participate, I’m just trying 
	to see if I can weigh the stuff I’m sharing more heavily than what it has to 
	go through to get there.
	
	Read the full interview at King Magazine
Are you the author profiled here? Email us your official website or Let us host your primary web presence.

 
             
                       
                       
                       
                       
                       
                      