Everything posted by bookfan
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How does Angela Davis know this?
...have nothing to do with what Angela Davis was talking about. Look, Kola, I made this a separate thread so it wouldn't be about you. Give it a break. I don't hate you.
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What is everyone reading?
The Derrick Bell Reader In other reading, I came across a reference to his essay, "The Constitutional Contradiction." Sounded interesting, so I Googled him and learned he was a real warrior in the school desegregation movement. His views -- especially his argument that whites only grant blacks rights when it doesn't threaten white privilege -- sounded like they would definitely be new intellectual territory for me, so I got the book. So far, I've just read the above-mentioned essay, which deals with the fact that the founding fathers made a deal with the devil (slavery) to get a government agreed to. This is one of several essays, apparently, in which Bell employs a signature narrative-fiction style rather than a scholarly approach. He constructs his essay as a sort of science fiction story, in which a black woman travels back in time to the Constitutional Convention to reprove the delegates -- all the while protected from the wrath of the Southerners by a shining force field. That's hokey enough that it was a distraction from the issues. Plenty more to read in this book, and I'm looking forward to it. Check it out here.
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How does Angela Davis know this?
No, you're not. That's your brain playing tricks on you.
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How does Angela Davis know this?
Well, this is embarassing. I should have looked a little harder, as this was a big deal in Minneapolis and Chicago, where the raids took place. According to news reports, the people targeted by the raids were peace activists and critics of American foreign policy from the Twin Cities or from Chicago's Freedom Road Socialist Organization. These were people who had traveled to Colombia and the Middle East, and the FBI was looking for evidence they had provided "material support" to FARC, a guerrilla organization in Colombia, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, or Hezbollah. Those are indeed terrorist groups (and in the case of FARC, kidnappers and drug traffickers to boot), and some of these people acknowledge having talked to members of the foreign organizations. That's where this investigation gets controversial: the Department of Justice has previously prosecuted American citizens for merely talking on the phone to people connected to proscribed groups. In the Sattar/Stewart case, those kinds of charges were thrown out by the courts. My apologies to Ms. Davis for too much knee-jerk skepticism.
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How does Angela Davis know this?
This was referenced in another thread, but I'm starting a separate one to talk just about this issue. A statement attributed to Angela Davis was posted on the web on Nov. 17, saying: On September 24 the FBI raided homes of 14 activists in movements in solidarity with oppressed workers and peoples of Latin America and Israel/Palestine. Read the whole thing here. As far as I can tell from scouring the Web, Davis is the only person in the world who claims to know anything about this. And she isn't sharing any details that would allow anyone to find out any more about it. I'd be very interested to learn more about this alleged incident. But did it really happen? And did that statement really come from Davis? If it did, why is she being so coy about it?
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Amazon book sales metrics
Author Juliette Akinyi Ochieng, aka blogger "Baldilocks," says her book, Tale of the Tigers, has sold 23 copies on Amazon in the 11 months since it was released (can't tell if it's been on Amazon that long). Its current sales rank is #10,139 overall and #9 in sports fiction. That appears to indicate that 99.9 percent of Amazon books have sold fewer than two dozen copies in the past year.
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Island Beneath the Sea
For a contemporary, non-fiction compendium of the horrors devised by slave owners and their overseers, read the online version of American Slavery As It Is. In 1839, the American Anti-Slavery Society published this 224-page encyclopedia of the unholy private tortures and public laws used to keep slaves in submission. The information was so brutal that the book came with this blurb: "True humanity consists not in a Squeamish Ear, but in listening to the story of human suffering and endeavoring to relieve it." The book is a Gulag Archipelago for American slavery -- information that should never be forgotten. It should be a text for Southern school children until there is no more of this kind of nostalgia for evil.
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Black writers in a ghetto of the publishing industry's making
My research consisted of clicking on the link you provided. Thanks!
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Black writers in a ghetto of the publishing industry's making
Judging by the review I read, the paperback cover gives a little better hint to Sugar's occupation. From the chat: Troy: The Sugar on the cover did not match the one in the story Ron: lol. I know the feeling but as covers go, I thought this one was pretty nice Troy: Nice, but incongruent Ron: Yeah, Sugar didn't sound that attractive Thumper: Yeah, I'm going to ask her about that. Thumper: Are you serious, Sugar didn't sound attractive? Troy: I thought Sugar sounded good myself (smile) Troy: Sugar: Tall, dark Skinned, sexy, hmmm, hmm hmmmmm
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Africa's Top Ten Crime Novels list by Michael Stanley
Interesting (to me) facts about Dendur Temple: built by the Roman emperor Augustus but dedicated to the local Nubian gods later used later as a Coptic (Christian) church Nile fish used to swim where NY museumgoers now walk: the temple was completely submerged at times after the first Aswan dam was built given to the U.S. by the government of Egypt the Smithsonian lost out to the Met in a bid to re-construct it on the bank of the Potomac (that would have been cool!)
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Africa's Top Ten Crime Novels list by Michael Stanley
Christie says the action in Death on the Nile takes place on the African continent, but other than a brief visit the all-white cast makes to an Egyptian temple, there really is nothing African at all in the story. It's about Americans and Europeans shut up in boat. Place matters so little that she could have had them sail up the Hudson and stop to visit the Temple of Dendur at the Met without any meaningful difference. Except that the Temple of Dendur was still actually on the Nile when Christie wrote the story, of course.
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Comment of the Week
On his website, Izrael responds to what he admits are frequent accusations that his attitude towards women is misogynistic. He links to Jamilah "Sister Toldja" Lemieux's pretty savage review of his book (quote: "THIS IS THE WORST F*CKING BOOK I HAVE EVER READ") but does not deal with the substance of it. Here are his major points, such as they are: 1. He rebuts the accusation that he is a "relentless misogynist" -- not by focusing on whether his attitudes are "misogynist", but on whether his expression of them can properly be called "relentless." He calculates that only 51 percent of his writing deals with women, which I guess proves that, at worst, he is only a misogynist when he's talking about women. 2. His defends using "bitch" 29 times in The Denzel Principle by saying that most of those uses are "context appropriate." What makes it appropriate, he explains, is that he is referring in some of those instances to two specific women -- presumably his ex-wives. 3. If you don't like it when men refer to women as bitches, that's because "you don’t hang out in bars or barbershops -- like I do." I'll tell you, this guy does not have an impressive intellect. Let me check the respect meter. [tap tap] Nope. Registering zero.
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Ghost Of Jobless Man Caught On Camera
I like your videos, DT. I saw the blurb for your "Mark of the Beast" pamphlet. Let me guess: it's the SKU?
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Comment of the Week
This week's winner: Kam Williams, for his curt assessment of Jimi Izrael. In his review of Izrael's book, The Denzel Principle, Kam calls Izrael "a miserable two-time loser with some serious unresolved anger issues." Apparently, a good part of Izrael's book is devoted to slagging his two ex-wives. Without a trace of irony, Izrael says both the women he chose to marry were "crazy bitches," and that, as black women, they had an "inability to make good choices." The irony just doesn't stop: Izrael's subtitle says "Black Women Can’t Find Good Black Men," and he complains about his second wife leaving him for some dreadlocked guy who "[wasn't] particularly handsome." Speaking of hair fetishists who aren't particularly handsome... Jimi Izrael more Jimi One of the topics on which you can hire Izrael to speak is "The Myth of Misogyny in Hip-Hop." If he's okay with calling women "ho's" than it's no surprise he's single again...and again.
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Black writers in a ghetto of the publishing industry's making
Anybody read this one?
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Where in the World is.....
I'm going to put that on a T shirt. Yes, this board is pretty dead now.
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The not so Black Hawks
That's squirrel, Chris. MISTER Squirrel.
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Comment of the Week
Izrael also had the runner-up for comment of the week. After noting that Kola claims to have dated every famous person in the world--including Elmo--he said, "...w8...she didn't date Elmo? WTF?" Seriously funny.
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Comment of the Week
McBragg says, "I invented the airplane." Münchhausen says, "I rode a cannonball." Kola says, "Jamal Lewis lied to me about his identity while we were dating."
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To Kill a Mockingbird is 50 years old
Gladwell's ideas are not particularly original. Law professors have been writing revisionist takes on Atticus Finch for a while. See Steven Lubet's 1999 article, "Reconstructing Atticus Finch," and Monroe Freedman's 1992 comments in the same vein. What I liked most about Gladwell's piece is how he points out that what Lee has Finch describe as a "blind spot" afflicting the leader of the lynch mob is actually a homicidal hatred of blacks.
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The not so Black Hawks
Both the teams that played for the Stanley Cup have mixed-race players. Dustin Byfuglien Ray Emery None of these guys got the whites-only memo, either.
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The not so Black Hawks
I don't agree that the only way the Blackhawks' Stanley Cup win can be described is as the emergence of a totem for racists. Are the black fans in that video self-haters?
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Comment of the Week
Author, professor, pundit, blogger, and NPR host Jimi Izrael called Kola Boof “the angry transxual Colonel McBragg of the Twitter game.” The man has a way with words (if not a perfect memory for the military rank of cartoon characters). Man, that takes me back to childhood! John Kass of the Chicago Tribune said years ago that Joe Harris based his Commander McBragg character in part on the Baron von Münchhausen stories. Remember how Lloyd Bentsen told Dan Quayle, "You're no Jack Kennedy." Well, Kola, you definitely are a Münchhausen.
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To Kill a Mockingbird is 50 years old
A great book. The celebrated writer Malcolm Gladwell has celebrated the anniversary with a piece in the New Yorker that says Atticus Finch isn't as heroic a character as people like to think: The Courthouse Ring. A lot of people are now mad at Gladwell, some because he's a Canadian-born New Yorker making pronouncements about the culture of the South in an era before he was born.
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aalbc's founder said, "I really enjoyed Tyler Perry's last film.
If he was naked, how could you tell he was a cross-dresser?