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vasta's review against another edition
5.0
I have yet to watch Raoul Peck’s I Am Not Your Negro, the critically-acclaimed documentary on James Baldwin released last year, but if the collection of Baldwin’s writing that inspired the documentary—captured in the I Am Not Your Negro collection—is any indication, it is a documentary that needs to be seen by everyone.
Reading Baldwin’s I Am Not Your Negro was sobering and powerful. After the events of Charlottesville a few weeks ago, when I heard people proclaim “this is not the America I know,” I was reminded of this passage in the book:
This is, in fact, the America so many of us know.
When I hear that so many people have never met a black person, or a Muslim, or a member of the LGBTQ+ community, I am often astounded; I shouldn’t be, but it still comes as a surprise. I sometimes forget that not everyone had the luck and opportunity to go to school with people of various backgrounds—racial, ethnic, socio-demographic, etc.—and to forge deep friendships with them.
I think of the question often: is the lack of connection with “the other” because of a lack of access, or just a lack of desire? This passage in I Am Not Your Negro was resonant:
Worth repeating: “That’s what segregation means. You don’t know what’s happening on the other side of the wall, because you don’t want to know.”
Read this book. Without any hyperbole, it will change the way you think about the world.
(originally posted on inthemargins.ca)
Reading Baldwin’s I Am Not Your Negro was sobering and powerful. After the events of Charlottesville a few weeks ago, when I heard people proclaim “this is not the America I know,” I was reminded of this passage in the book:
White people are astounded by Birmingham.
Black people aren’t.
White people are endlessly demanding to be
reassured that Birmingham is really on Mars.
They don’t want to believe,
still less to act on the belief,
that what is happening in Birmingham
is happening all over the country.
They don’t want to realize that there is not one step,
morally or actually, between
Birmingham and Los Angeles.
This is, in fact, the America so many of us know.
When I hear that so many people have never met a black person, or a Muslim, or a member of the LGBTQ+ community, I am often astounded; I shouldn’t be, but it still comes as a surprise. I sometimes forget that not everyone had the luck and opportunity to go to school with people of various backgrounds—racial, ethnic, socio-demographic, etc.—and to forge deep friendships with them.
I think of the question often: is the lack of connection with “the other” because of a lack of access, or just a lack of desire? This passage in I Am Not Your Negro was resonant:
Most of the white Americans I’ve ever encountered, really, you know, had a Negro friend or a Negro maid or somebody in high school, but they never, you know, or rarely, after school was over or whatever came into my kitchen, you know. We were segregated from the schoolhouse door. Therefore, he doesn’t know, he really does not know, what it was like for me to leave my house, you know, to leave the school and go back to Harlem. He doesn’t know how Negroes live. And it comes as a great surprise to the Kennedy brothers and to everybody else in the country. I’m certain, again, you know…that again like most white Americans I have encountered, they have no…I’m sure they have nothing whatever against Negroes, but that’s really not the question, you know. The question is really a kind of apathy and ignorance, which is the price we pay for segregation. That’s what segregation means. You don’t know what’s happening on the other side of the wall, because you don’t want to know.
Worth repeating: “That’s what segregation means. You don’t know what’s happening on the other side of the wall, because you don’t want to know.”
Read this book. Without any hyperbole, it will change the way you think about the world.
(originally posted on inthemargins.ca)
morganome's review against another edition
4.0
Finally got around to watching the film on Kanopy and wow… just in awe of James Baldwin. I really enjoyed reading this (definitely watch the documentary first before as it’s essentially the screenplay/transcript). I felt pretty sad knowing that Baldwin never got to finish the book that the documentary is based off of, but it’s moving to see how his words (taken up by Raoul Peck) have been given new urgency and meaning in this form.
kobiahlan_'s review against another edition
5.0
This is a very good read that furthers your perspective around James Baldwin. If you have already seen the film it will make even more sense once you read it. It’s gives a small glimpse to James and the comparisons he made in his life.
lillibooks's review against another edition
challenging
emotional
informative
inspiring
reflective
tense
fast-paced
5.0
bookishkarina's review against another edition
challenging
dark
emotional
informative
reflective
fast-paced
4.5
ptenorio71's review against another edition
informative
inspiring
reflective
fast-paced
4.0
Good book companion to the documentary following Baldwin's interaction with Medgar Evers, MLK and Malcom X. Baldwin compares and contrast the three social justice advocates who all were murdered prior to their 40th birthday. Baldwin challenges the status quo in multiple interviews and converstaion interactions.
eleasereads's review against another edition
4.0
I loved the pictures as well as Peck's respectful writing to Baldwin.
gonza_basta's review against another edition
4.0
I have not seen the film, maybe I will, but I think that the author succeeds in giving a very clear picture of the situation in those years, which are not so far away or different from these years. I absolutely must read "Go, tell it to the mountains" which has been waiting for a while on my bedside table.
Non ho visto il film, forse lo faró, ma credo che comunque l'autore riesca a dare un quadro molto chiaro della situazione di quegli anni, che poi non sono poi cosí lontani o differenti da questi anni. Devo comunque assolutamente leggere "Go, tell it to the mountains" che mi sta aspettando da un pezzo sul comodino.
Non ho visto il film, forse lo faró, ma credo che comunque l'autore riesca a dare un quadro molto chiaro della situazione di quegli anni, che poi non sono poi cosí lontani o differenti da questi anni. Devo comunque assolutamente leggere "Go, tell it to the mountains" che mi sta aspettando da un pezzo sul comodino.
gerryds's review against another edition
5.0
An amazing collection of thoughts, ideas, and moments from one of the premier thinkers of this country. Just like the movie, this includes priceless quotes from James Baldwin, a man who loved this country so much, that he was compelled to come back to it and challenge what was and is the status quo.
Absolutely worth the buy. You’ll definitely open it occasionally for some of his more well known speeches.
Absolutely worth the buy. You’ll definitely open it occasionally for some of his more well known speeches.