James McBride, musician and author of Song Yet Sung, talks about Harriet Tubman, contemporary black culture, and--perhaps--why Holiday Inn cures his writer's block.
Song Yet Sung is available for purchase at Amazon.com
Event
James McBride will be reading tonight at Hue-Man Bookstore & Cafe (2319 Frederick Douglass Boulevard @ 125th Street) at 6PM.
Song Yet Sung is available for purchase at Amazon.com
Event
James McBride will be reading tonight at Hue-Man Bookstore & Cafe (2319 Frederick Douglass Boulevard @ 125th Street) at 6PM.
Comments [8]
megan - you're right, to a point. callers are screened for all kinds of things - redundancy, relevance, the specific point the caller wants to make, etc.
it's not so much a matter of the question being legit, but that it seemed so far afield from what they were discussing. i don't think his book addresses the contemporary anger/frustrations of black americans (like ellis cose, for example), thus his answer about things that happened in the past 25 years being more directly related to someone's anger. then he had to move on with no link made to his book or the characters and ideas therein.
the other question makes more point even more so.
having said that, you're right about not throwing the baby out with the bath water. i just i have rarely heard questions that were so off point.
wayne - no need to censor or muzzle callers
the psychotherapist discussion about anger was interesting and legit....and right on topic re: book about slavery and future of america
don't throw out the babyt with bathwater
I'm surprised and disappointed that the producers even put these callers through. Their questions bordered on insulting. A noted author asked to explain a psychotherapists' patient's anger? As if her one or two or three patients reflect African Americans? And a juxtaposition of African American vs. Negro contibutions? Are you kidding? I never hear such inane questions being asked of other guests. Are there any African Americans working on this show? It's really a disservice to James McBride, an eloquent writer and thoughtful person who graciously responded to calls that must have been infuriating. They certainly were for me.
Many of our ancestors from many different cultures have suffered horribly in the past. We all have to get beyond our past suffering in order to be a healthy society. We don't have to forget or even forgive (I think) but we can't continue to let that anger motivate our behavior or become an excuse for not making progress.
My lord. What has the African American given to society vs what has the Negro given? How is this a question? What distinction is he making? I am very glad you quickly moved on from this question, but it is worrisome that even within the liberal bubble of New York's public radio, people still think that this is a valid question.
hip hop culture --- what exactly is that?
misogynistic black men in gold chains rapping about bitches and hos and money
you bet that isn't black culture -- but all to often it's the gangsta rap that dominates
Has James McBride read Octavia Butler's Kindred which also describes the slavery culture on the Eastern Shore of Maryland? Her story takes a modern African-American woman who finds herself there during slavery. If not, please read.
why do people equate black culture to hiphop culture.
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