Category Archives: Ajuan Mance

My Pictures, Their Words

There are moments when an event or series of events makes it difficult to go about your everyday life in the same way or with the same mindset as  before those events transpired. These moments, be they heartbreaking or exhilarating, illuminate aspects of our lives, our settings, and the people around us in new and often transformative ways. The late Audre Lorde described this phenomenon as a shift in the “quality of light” by which we see ourselves and the world around us. The acquittal of George Zimmerman is one such event.  So much about the tragic death that led to Zimmerman’s trial revolved around the historic gulf between how so many Americans see Black men and how Black men see themselves. And, although I am African American, the death of Trayvon Martin and the fact that it grew out of one person’s perception, based solely on his appearance, that this teenaged boy represented a threat has caused me to consider my own consumption of films, music, television programs, and other media that reinforce the notion that Black men are dangerous, deviant, and lazy, except in the pursuit of criminal enterprise or sexual conquest.

I do not subscribe to the “positive images” doctrine of Black representation (whose adherents tend to believe that the only acceptable representations of African Americans resemble the characters on The Cosby Show). An emphasis on so-called positive images of Black people imposes its own pernicious form of erasure, of all U.S. Black folks whose comportment, dress, and/or diction falls outside of the realm of what some people have deemed as the “proper” performance of Blackness. Still, I am also aware that, despite the breadth of representations of Black people produced by independent artists, writers, and performers of African descent, these richly diverse portrayals are most often overshadowed by the more easily accessible programming and imagery produced and distributed through  major media outlets and corporations.

And so, for the next week or so, beginning with my next post, I am going to going to feature the words of some of my favorite African American male writers, with an emphasis on the ways that they have depicted Black men. After each of the next several posts, I will include a brief quote from an African American writer that captures his own vision of Black men. I’ll try not to repeat writers, although, as an African American literature professor, I certainly have my favorites.

I hope you enjoy this brief tribute to the ways that Black men see themselves and each other.

Ajuan Mance

1001 Black Men–#565

This is a drawing from a recent afternoon of sketching at Peet’s Coffee & Tea in the Castro. What this drawing does not capture is the subject’s incredibly muscular body. I didn’t post this with the other drawings from this session, but I thought that this week would be a good time to post as many drawings of vivacious, beautiful, powerful Black men as I can. Just think of it as my way of reminding all of us that those who fear and kill Black people are not, in fact, defeating us.* Every Black man who is striving, thriving, or surviving enacts the daily defeat of those individuals and institutions that would see men of African descent reduced to subservience or eliminated entirely.

*By “us” I mean Black people and everyone who loves, befriends, creates family with, or makes community with Black people.

Ajuan Mance

1001 Black Men–#564

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Seen at the breakfast buffet, Embassy Suites Atlanta-Perimeter Center.

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Although Oakland has a lot to offer to people of all ethnicities, I have to say that, compared to Oakland, Atlanta feels a lot like an African American utopia. The Black community in this city–or at least in the parts of the city I saw on my most recent visit–feels energetic and joyful. I was in Atlanta for our biennial family reunion, and at the hotel in which we were staying, ours was one of at least four African American families who were holding reunions during the same weekend. The presence of so many Black families celebrating their love and connection just amplified the feeling that I always get when I visit the East Coast, that there is just a great sense of prosperity and possibility throughout large segments of the African American community.

On a day like today, when so many of us are coming to terms with the reality of the George Zimmerman acquittal, it feels good to see so much shared hope and pleasure among so many Black people; and it is wonderful to be surrounded by so much love–and not just the love from my own relatives, but also the love between the members of all of the other reunioning Black families around us. It is a good reminder that, in the face of the grief and losses we all suffer in our lives, family can be a sustaining force. Like the Martin family, my own family has suffered heartbreaking and seemingly insurmountable losses … but we have come together, we have held each other close, and we have carried each other through each of our tragedies. Most importantly, our loved ones live on in our memories at each reunion and every day, when their names are spoken with reverence and gratitude.

Ajuan Mance