Collective Improvisations: Amiri Baraka and the Articulation of Blackness Across Socio-Cultural Movements

In 1966, Leroi Jones, soon to be Amiri Baraka, outline​d​ a program to reorient the philosophical underpinnings of ​Black study. Modes of inhabiting and thereby constructing the domains in which one participates were revealed as a function of one’s mode of expression. ​Jones/Baraka proposed that bla...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Victor Peterson II
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Warsaw 2023-07-01
Series:Eidos. A Journal for Philosophy of Culture
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eidos.uw.edu.pl/collective-improvisations/
Description
Summary:In 1966, Leroi Jones, soon to be Amiri Baraka, outline​d​ a program to reorient the philosophical underpinnings of ​Black study. Modes of inhabiting and thereby constructing the domains in which one participates were revealed as a function of one’s mode of expression. ​Jones/Baraka proposed that blackness ​was expressed by ​the operation of a collective improvisation. How​​ can improvisation, traditionally conceived as an individual activity, be a collective process? Taking our cue from articulation theory and the request that it be formalized by Stuart ​H​all, we explore what may superficially seem counter-intuitive but​ is able to be modeled​ ​by way of an explanation of its generative syntactic structure. In so doing, puzzles associated with identity theory, intersubjectivity, and ​modalities​ of expression are revealed as not ​as intractable​ as they are assumed to be, especially​ with​in​ the discipline of Black studies.
ISSN:2544-302X