Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

End of Chiraq: A Literary Mixtape [Minkštas viršelis]

4.14/5 (130 ratings by Goodreads)
Edited by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Contributions by , Edited by , Contributions by
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 226x152x20 mm, weight: 305 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2018
  • Leidėjas: Northwestern University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0810137186
  • ISBN-13: 9780810137189
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 200 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 226x152x20 mm, weight: 305 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-May-2018
  • Leidėjas: Northwestern University Press
  • ISBN-10: 0810137186
  • ISBN-13: 9780810137189
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Written in true mixtape fashion, a collection of poems, rap lyrics, short stories, essays, interviews and artwork brings to life Chicago, the city that came to be known as “Chiraq” (“Chicago” + “Iraq”), and the people who live in its vibrant and occasionally violent neighborhoods. Original.

The End of Chiraq: A Literary Mixtape is a collection of poems, rap lyrics, short stories, essays, interviews, and artwork about Chicago, the city that came to be known as "Chiraq" ("Chicago" + "Iraq"), and the people who live in its vibrant and occasionally violent neighborhoods. Tuned to the work of Chicago’s youth, especially the emerging artists and activists surrounding Young Chicago Authors, this literary mixtape unpacks the meanings of “Chiraq” as both a vexed term and a space of possibility.

"Chiraq" has come to connote the violence—interpersonal and structural—that many Chicago youth regularly experience. But the contributors to The End of Chiraq show that Chicago is much more than Chiraq. Instead, they demonstrate how young people are thinking and mobilizing, engaged in a process of creating a new and safer world for themselves, their communities, and their city.

In true mixtape fashion, the book is an exercise in "low end theory" that does not just include so-called underground and marginal voices, but foregrounds them. Edited by award-winning poets, writers, and teachers Javon Johnson and Kevin Coval, The End of Chiraq addresses head-on the troublesome relationship between Chicago and Chiraq and envisions a future in which both might be transformed.


An anthology of poetry, lyrics, artwork, and essays from Chicago youth that explores the origins and meanings of the name “Chiraq.”
Preface xi
Javon Johnson
Intro xv
Javon Johnson
Welcome to Chiraq
on hearing King Louie
5(2)
Andrew Barber
when King Louie first heard the word chiraq
7(2)
Kevin Coval
To Live and Die in "Chiraq"
9(4)
Mariame Kaba
Rome Wasn't Built in a Day
13(3)
Malcolm London
Memories
16(1)
Aneko Jackson
Windowpain: Bryce Thomas
17(2)
Nile Lansana
My grandmother tells me and my cousins why she hates the word Chiraq
19(2)
Demetrius Amparan
Do we even need to be understood to get free?
21(2)
Page May
9 of Disks
23(2)
Fatimah Asghar
Frank Bradely (Interview)
25(2)
Aneko Jackson
How America Loves Chicago's Ghosts More Than the People Still Living in the City: An Erasure Poem
27(4)
Jacqui Germain
A Tale of Two & Many Cities
I Am Windy City
31(1)
Patricia Frazier
FAKE
32(3)
toaster
Concrete Flowers
35(1)
Aneko Jackson
Chicago is the world's Harold's chicken box
36(1)
Kara Jackson
When asked about Chicago: A confession
37(2)
Alfonzo Kahlil
History, as Written by the Victors
39(3)
Krista Franklin
Ye though I walk through Chi
42(1)
Naudia J. Williams
Ghazal for White Hen Pantry
43(1)
Jamila Woods
Holy Hermosa
44(2)
Sara Salgado
Corn man on every corner
46(2)
Sammy Ortega
Into a White Neighborhood
48(2)
Melinda Hernandez
Poem for Cal City: Confession
50(2)
Jose Olivarez
In the Bridgeport row house,
52(1)
Natalie Rose Richardson
I'm from Chicago, but Not Really
53(1)
Michael Cuaresma
Daughter
54(2)
Claire DeRosa
Damon
56(4)
Gwendolyn Brooks College Prep Louder Than a Bomb Team
Flatline
60(2)
Raymesha Henry
Black Boy Dreams
62(1)
Aneko Jackson
Ode to North Lawndale
63(4)
Anton Charles Sanders
Contesting the Narrative
Drill
67(1)
Breanna Bonslater
Why Is the Chicago Police Department Targeting Chief Keef?
68(5)
Jake Krzeczowski
we real
73(1)
Kevin Coval
why do black boys smoke so much weed?
74(1)
Demetrius Amparan
Kill the Noise(y)
75(3)
Tara C. Mahadevan
Windowpain: Raymond a.k.a. Lil' Ray
78(2)
Nile Lansana
The GO
80(2)
Marwin Williams
notes for Mars Blackmon on the making of Spike Lee's film Chi-Raq
82(4)
Kevin Coval
Why I'm bootlegging Chi-Raq
86(5)
A Nate Marshall Joint
The Culture Is the Art
Rethinking Revolution: Creating Space for the Black Body through the Spoken Word
91(4)
Alfonzo Kahlil
Hip-Hop Poet
95(2)
Marvin Tate
Woop Wop De Barn
97(1)
Nate Marshall
Search
98(2)
KZ
The Stoop
100(3)
Jalen Kobayashi
Slay
103(2)
KZ
Speak
105(1)
E'mon Lauren
I TAG CTA
106(1)
Sammy Ortega
Flower Breaking through the Concrete: An Interview with Liz Lazdins
107(4)
Leah Love
in the business: a manifesto
111(2)
Kane One
On Afro-Futurism: A Roundtable with D. Denenge Akpem, Damon Locks, and Ytasha L. Womack
113(6)
Leah Love
Captives public showing
119(4)
Matthew Wilbourn
The Future of Chicago Ghost Town
123(2)
Idris Goodwin
Mama Emily tells the story
125(3)
Sarah McKee
Out the Trap: Building with the Elephant Rebellion
128(5)
Grace Jones
Paradise on fire
133(2)
Jahnari Pruitt
How to Win Reparations: Chicago's Model Legislation and Where Actitvists Have Their Sights Set Next
135(10)
Yana Kunichoff
Sarah Macaraeg
BY & BY
145(2)
Jamila Woods
Somewhere, Upcoming
147(1)
Kara Jackson
Toward the Unreasonable
148(4)
Page May
Nate Marshall
Water Pressure
152(1)
Sammy Ortega
#BlackLivesMatter and...the Six Unconditionals
153(5)
Haki Madhubuti
Ode to Dawn
158(3)
Gellila Asmamaw
Outro
161
Kevin Coval
Javon Johnson is an assistant professor of African American Studies at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and the director of African American and African diaspora studies. He is the author of Killing Poetry: Blackness and the Making of Slam and Spoken Word Communities (2017) and is an award-winning spoken word poet who has appeared on HBO, BET, and TVOne.

Kevin Coval is the founder of Louder Than a Bomb: The Chicago Youth Poetry Festival and artistic director of Young Chicago Authors. He is the coeditor of The BreakBeat Poets: New American Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop (2015); author of A Peoples History of Chicago, Schtick, L-vis Lives!, and Slingshots (A Hip-Hop Poetica); and author (with Idris Goodwin) of This Is Modern Art.