Going Too Far

Essays about America's Nervous Breakdown

Livre numérique

Ishmael Reed goes too far, again! Just as the fugitive slaves went to Canada and challenged the prevailing view that slaves were well off under their masters, Ishmael Reed has gone all the way to Quebec—where this book is published—to challenge the widespread opinion that racism is no longer a factor in American life.

In some ways, says Reed, the United States very much resembles the country of the 1850s. The representations of blacks in popular culture are throwbacks to the days of minstrelsy. Politicians are raising stereotypes about blacks reminiscent of those that the fugitive slaves found it necessary to combat: that they are lazy and dependent and need people to manage them.
Ishmael Reed establishes his diagnosis of a nervous breakdown in three parts. Part I on a black president of the United States is entitled “Chief Executive and Chief Exorcist, Too?” Part II on culture and representations of African Americans in our supposed post-race era, “Coonery and Buffoonery.” In Part III, “As Relayed by Themselves,” cultural figures have a chance to tell the story in their own words.

Table des matières

Table des matières
Going Too Far 1
Contents 9
INTRODUCTION / Going There 11
PART 1 / Chief Executive and Chief Exorcist, Too? 31
President Obama and the New Secession 33
BLACK MEN AND THE WHITE LEFT Why Some White Progressives Make Me Sick 47
What Progressives Don’t Understand About Obama 57
OBAMA, HIS “BASE” AND THE JIM CROW MEDIA Joan Walsh’s TwitterBrawl With Herself 59
VOTING WHTH HARD HATS Brown Shirts, Black Shirts, T-Shirts 65
Ethnic Studies in the Age of the Tea Party 73
TWO TEA BAGGERS A Fly on the Wall 89
PART II / “Coonery and Buffoonery” 93
HOLLYWOOD’S ENDURING MYTH OF THE BLACK MALE SEXUAL PREDATOR The Selling of Precious 95
Fade to White 117
The NAACP House of Shame 121
The Wire Goes to College 129
Diminutive Playwright Tackles Criminal Justice Dragon 135
Trouble Beside the Bay 151
“She Wanted It” 155
PART III / As Relayed By Themselves 159
BEING BLACK AND “DIFFICULT” IN HOLLYWOOD An Interview with Lou Gossett, Jr.1 161
At Work: Ishmael Reed on Juice! 177
THE RETURN OF THE NIGGER BREAKERS: A GHETTO READING AND WRITTING RAT RESPONDS TO HIS CRITICS Jill Nelson InterviewsIshmael Reed 181
An Interview with Terry McMillan 187
MUSICIAN AND COMPOSER WITHOUT BORDERS An Interview with David Murray 195
WHERE ARE THE “PIRATES” COMING FROM? An Interview with Nuruddin Farah 213
WATERMILL AT GDANSK The U.S. Puts ItsBest Foot Forward 227

Compléments