Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Baraka Epitomizes Black Arts Movement


In his essay, “Expressive Language,” Amiri Baraka drives home a remarkable yet refined message: words can either unite or divide different types of people. Baraka, an activist, playwright, poet, and founder of the Black Arts Movement, uses his words in different mediums to bolster the black aesthetic.

Baraka made an impact on several areas of the Black Arts Movement. He wrote fiery poetry, powerful books, and thought-provoking plays. To extend his literary reach and to promote the black aesthetic even further, he went into publishing, starting Totem Press, which housed a diverse group of writers.

In “Expressive Language,” Baraka talks about how language can be shaped and colored by the speaker, or as Baraka writes, “words have users, but as well, users have words.”

Take, for example, Baraka’s take on money and wealth. He notes that when you ask a poor person with only 70 cents to his name if he has money, he will tell you, “Yes, of course I do.”  But when a Rockefeller says, “I have money,” he means an entirely different thing. Same phrase, different meaning.

Baraka provides another example with the phrase “God don’t never change.” A wealthy person using these words means, “God don’t never change,” as in “keep things the way they are.” But when a black, poor person says it, it’s considered a complaint, a vent, as in “why doesn’t God ever change?” 


Through words and various literary mediums, Baraka left an indelible mark on the Black Arts Movement.

2 comments:

Febuary's Girl said...

I will admit that my first awareness Baraka was a little off putting. For me I was not accustomed to the in your face approach to the issues at hand. Baraka definetly pushed the envelop

Cherakye said...

It is definitely true that almost all of his words are either uplifting or dividing. Personally, I think that its kind of hard to get past that real straight forward exclamation of things.