Abstract

By adhering to Afrocentric vision--in voice as well as subject matter--the poems of Amiri and Lorenzo Thomas acknowledge the painful American legacy of white oppression of blacks, as well as pay tribute to the rich texture of African American culture. Yet in style and tone, their poetry also enacts the struggle for individual integrity inherent in any use of ethnic and racial consciousness as trope. To appropriate the thinking of K. Anthony Appiah (in Race, Culture, Identity: Misunderstood Connections), often in their poems and Thomas freely depict people, events, and conditions based on (in Appiah's terms) false theories [that] play central role in the application of labels (96). (1) result in both Baraka's and Thomas's poetry is exploration of nothing less than quixotic truth at the heart of American multiculturalism itself, namely, that to advocate racial or ethnic identity is to begin to deconstruct it, paradox American poets are only beginning to articulate with any clarity. One manifestation of this paradox evident in the work of both and Thomas is the almost contradictory pose of the as avant-garde yet didactic. As is well known, has adopted this position for nearly half century. As Aldon Lynn Nielsen has convincingly shown, since the 1960s has been committed to an aesthetics of innovation (Integral Music 99), even at the expense of his own material comfort. Yet as Kwame Dawes and others have also emphasized, Baraka is public poet and an agitator who, although in some respects he may resemble the West African griot as a spokesperson for the (xii), is not only speaking for his own community but constantly ... involved with the task of shaping aesthetic (xiii) to influence that community. For his part, Lorenzo Thomas also delves into both innovative aesthetics and didacticism, though with markedly different results. While he has been consistently aligned with avant-garde writers, from the Black Arts Movement early in his life to the L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E school more recently, one hallmark of both his writing and his life was his abiding interest in the public role of poetry (both artistically and politically). In his 1994 essay, The Blues and the King's Thomas defines this double function of poetry according to what he calls the ethics of literary and ethnic communities. Acknowledging the importance of both the experimental and the popular venues for poetry in the U. S., especially (though not exclusively) within African American communities, Thomas argues for how the pointedly didactic (438) nature of poetry in the oral as well as the literary African American traditions serves its audience both in maintaining normative and in offering opinions (436). For Thomas, neither values (namely, the social ethics that poem may openly advance) nor alternative values (the avant-garde aesthetics that challenge the status quo) should take precedence when we assess poem critically. Rather, the unique manner in which poetry can create dynamic balance between these two motives at once is ultimately its role, de facto, in the American canon, even though individual poem may not at first be recognized as such. (2) In applying this critical perspective to Baraka's poetry itself, for instance, Thomas compares to Paul Laurence Dunbar when he writes, Just as Dunbar's poetic production was cannily and problematically divided between dialect poems and lyrics in standard English, so does Amiri Baraka's poetry occupy two modes: intensely personal lyrics and incisively political social comment. persona of Baraka's lyrics, however, is always clearly in this world now, [so it] is not surprising that brought something of his ideas--as expressed in his bifurcated poetic output--to the developing Black Arts aesthetic (Bernstein 310-11). In effect, by deserting Greenwich Village to take his version of the avant-garde into the streets of Harlem, essentially rejected the bohemian option in favor of the unique position that, however quixotically, denied the notion of avant-garde marginality (Bernstein 311). …

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