3选自《在身体之上:一首黑人社会史诗的诗歌,PT.II——COVID时代的爱//抵抗》

Ryan J. Petteway
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这里收录的三首诗来自于2020年1月至8月间的一部诗集。全集共27首诗歌,审视了结构性种族主义、种族化警察暴力和COVID-19的交叉点,借鉴了几代黑人艺术家、活动家和学者的创造性抵抗,如尼娜·西蒙娜、兰斯顿·休斯、保罗·劳伦斯·邓巴、奥德丽·洛德、艾达·b·威尔斯、詹姆斯·鲍德温和W.E.B.杜波依斯。作为一个整体,该系列精心制作,以对抗危机时期公共卫生的非历史、非政治、种族主义和同性恋倾向。这里的三首诗来自第二部分,“COVID时代的爱//抵抗”。这些选择将社会正义、结构性种族主义、经济不平等和公共卫生历史联系起来,将公共卫生主题与黑人音乐、诗歌、文学和历史编织在一起,以(重新)框架/分析黑人、土著和其他有色人种面临的双重流行病,并对我们的存在/抵抗进行细微的叙述。《MASKS//Exposed》和《IMAGINATION//Immunity》与COVID-19有关,而《BLACK//Gold》(以嘻哈音乐创作/录制)则是COVID-19和种族化警察暴力的交汇点。《口罩//暴露》对COVID-19早期阶段的公共卫生和政治话语进行了批判性分析,借鉴公共卫生文献、批判理论和新闻媒体,对“所有人都在一起”、社会距离(隔离)和COVID-19是“机会均等感染”的主流叙事进行了质疑。“想象//免疫”以想象作为逃避/免疫为主题,以我童年对纳斯(1996年)《如果我统治被统治者(想象那)》的怀旧之情为叙事架构/脉搏,对COVID-19如何影响有幼儿的人的日常生活进行了个人反思。《黑色/金色》对COVID-19双重流行病和种族化警察暴力之间的交叉点进行了抒情分析,将对两者的批判性社会评论整合在一起,这些评论根植于结构性种族主义、种族资本主义以及认知和象征性暴力的更广泛形式/规范中。根据黑人抗议音乐的传统创作,歌词唤起了詹姆斯·鲍德温、弗朗茨·法农、阿萨塔·沙库尔和尼娜·西蒙的歌词/作品,并使用了后者演唱的“黑色是我真爱头发的颜色”和“奇怪的水果”的声乐和钢琴样本。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
3 Selections from "Upon the Body: Poems of/to a Black Social Epi, PT.II--LOVE//Resistance in the Time of COVID"
The 3 poems included here are from a collection written between January and August 2020. The full collection—27 poems total—examines intersections of structural racism, racialized police violence, and COVID-19, drawing from generations of creative resistance produced and embodied by Black artists, activists, and scholars like Nina Simone, Langston Hughes, Paul Laurence Dunbar, Audre Lorde, Ida B. Wells, James Baldwin, and W.E.B. DuBois. The collection as a whole is crafted as counternarrative to public health’s ahistoric, apolitical, racist, and homophobic proclivities in times of crisis. The 3 poems here are from Part II, "LOVE//Resistance in the Time of COVID.” These selections make connections between social justice, structural racism, economic inequality, and public health history, weaving public health themes together with Black music, poetry, literature, and history to (re)frame/analyze the dual pandemics confronting Black, Indigenous, and other people of color, and to nuance narratives of our presence/resistance. “MASKS//Exposed” and “IMAGINATION//Immunity” do so in relation to COVID-19, while “BLACK//Gold” (written/recorded as a hip-hop track) sits at the intersection of COVID-19 and racialized police violence. “MASKS//Exposed” offers a critical analysis of the public health and political discourse during the early stages of COVID-19, drawing from public health literature, critical theory, and news media to interrogate dominant narratives of being “all in this together”, social distance(ing), and COVID-19 being an “equal opportunity infection.” “IMAGINATION//Immunity” offers a personal reflection on how COVID-19 has shaped daily life for those with young children, anchored in a theme of imagination as escape/immunity, and taking my childhood nostalgia of Nas’ (1996) “If I Ruled the Ruled (Imagine That)” as the narrative architecture/pulse. “BLACK//Gold” offers a lyrical analysis of intersections between dual pandemics of COVID-19 and racialized police violence, integrating critical social commentary of each as rooted in broader forms/norms of structural racism, racial capitalism, and epistemic and symbolic violence. Written in the tradition of Black protest music, the lyrics evoke the words/writings of James Baldwin, Frantz Fanon, Assata Shakur, and Nina Simone—using vocal and piano samples from the latter’s renditions of “Black is the Color of My True Love’s Hair” and “Strange Fruit.”
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