Sacred Fire: The QBR 100 Essential Black Books
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About this ebook
"From critiques of W. E. B. Du Bois's Black Reconstruction in America to Alex Haley's Roots to Langston Hughes's The Ways of White Folks, these short, trenchant essays stimulate and challenge."-Booklist
"A celebration of black literature. . .insightful commentary."-Ebony
"A rich and surprising assortment." -American Legacy
"Delving into a book is an entertaining and edifying way to celebrate and reflect on the rich tapestry of African American history. A great way to start is with Sacred Fire: The QBR 100 Essential Black Books." -Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Capturing the full sweep of writing from the diaspora-from Africa to the Caribbean to America-Sacred Fire is a soul-stirring collection of provocative analysis on 100 works of literature that have shaped and defined black culture for over 200 years.
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Reviews for Sacred Fire
3 ratings1 review
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Published in 1999, so now over a decade old, Sacred Fire includes one- or two-page precis of 100 top works by Black authors about the Black experience(s). The summaries are gathered into six sections: history, identity, politics, spirituality, women, and men; each section is prefaced with a commentary by a different current author. A book like this is of potential interest on two counts: what the book has to say about the works it covers; and which works are included or excluded from the list. In this case, the discussion of the works is weak. At its best, the summaries mention the historical and current importance of a work, but many of the summaries offer minimal insight, and none are critically balanced - the worst a summary might say is that the language in a particular work is 'strong', or 'even if you don't agree with the author's conclusions, the questions he raises are fascinating'. One would learn more about most of the works - about their authors, their plots and themes, their critical reception, their historical impact -- from reading a collection of Wikipedia entries on the same titles.On the other hand, Sacred Fire offers a snapshot of the books judged most influential by a set of Black (American) intellectuals at the turn of the millennium. As the editors explain: "Our request [to a panel of scholars, booksellers and readers] was simple and straightforward: Name ten books by authors from the African Diaspora that have had the greatest impact on you....We drew from this survey a range of books that identified the issues and philosophies that we, as a people, felt were most critical, and that were written by the artists who most eloquently and powerfully presented these issues to the world." The resulting list is very much of its time and place. It includes works by African authors - Chinua Achebe, Ben Okri, Ngugi Wa Thiongo -- but these are major works commonly read by Americans, not a representative sample of African literature or writers. The list also includes several popular works from the 1970s and 1990s whose significance already seems diminished, such as Waiting to Exhale. For breadth, and to cover writers who should be on a list of 100 but who couldn't quite fit, the list relies on a couple anthologies from the early to mid-1990s. My guess is that these have since been superseded by more up-to-date collections. Still, the list as a whole includes a bunch of works I haven't read, and should, so even dated, Sacred Fire was a useful quick read.
Book preview
Sacred Fire - Max Rodriguez
Introduction
QBR: The Black Book Review was established five years ago to provide a forum for the critical review and celebration of books that captured our voices, our stories, and our lives. We’ve taken it as our responsibility and mission to praise and admonish our writers, as needed, and to expose their work to our readers in an unprecedented way.
This book is an outgrowth of that mission. While we have traditionally exposed our readers to the work of our best contemporary writers, for the purposes of this book, it was our intent to gather a consensus on the literature that has most impacted us as a community across the years. Not just the latest flowering of critically and commercially successful literature (although it’s good that we continue to develop as a market), but the classics: the works that represent the record of our collective experience. We wanted to find out how important the written history of our experience is to us today. So we asked.
Our request was very simple and straightforward: Name ten books by authors from the African Diaspora that have had the greatest impact on you. We asked everyone. (I know, I know, but we almost asked you.) We asked scholars and historians (they read, too); bookstore owners and book buyers; members of reading clubs and attendees at QBR’s literary series. (I even asked my sister.) We drew from this survey a range of books that identified the issues and philosophies that we, as a people, felt were most critical, and that were written by the artists who most eloquently and powerfully presented these issues to the world.
This book, however, is not a statistical journal. What you will find are the results presented in a most informative and, yes, opinionated manner. The editors of QBR gathered the numerous responses, selected the titles most often cited, and supplemented them with our own recommendations. We then categorized those books into sections we believe speak directly to the heart of our matters: Origins, Ancestors, and Memory; Community and Identity; Politics, Nationalism, and Revolution; Soul and Spirit; Sisters’ Stories; Brothers’ Lives. Our final step was to offer brief commentary on each book, summarizing its plot or thesis, talking about what makes it special, and placing it, whenever possible, within the context of its time.
I have often spoken about the way interest in our books has historically waxed and waned. It would be easy to say that every thirty years since the mid-1800s, the beginning of Reconstruction, there has been a spike of interest in the literary affairs of the Negro.
Following the international interest in Frederick Douglass’s freedom cry, the writing of Booker T. Washington held sway; Charles Chestnutt and Paul Laurence Dunbar were the anointed of the 1900s; Alain Locke ushered in Harlem’s New Negro Movement in the late 1920s and early 1930s; Amiri Baraka, Haki Madhubuti, and Sonia Sanchez slapped! us to consciousness as the Black Arts Movement spread Stokely’s fire in the 1960s; Sheharazod Ali’s The Black Man’s Guide to Understanding the Black Woman was the flint, and Terry McMillan’s Disappearing Acts was the fire of the 1990s commercial renaissance.
In fact, every resurgent period of interest in African American literature corresponds to intense social changes. The Civil War marked the voluntary conscription and arming of a previously enslaved population; the mass migration of a disenfranchised public followed. The development of an urbane African American cultural aesthetic was followed by a call to black power. Today’s literature reflects the economic and social progress wrought from Malcolm, Martin, urban unrest, open-door policies, and affirmative action. Accommodation and demand, protest and personal introspection mark this current period of African American literature.
Still, what we hoped to identify within this book were not only the books that serve as the literary landmarks of our social movements but also those critical and illuminating works that, due to the social stillness of the moment, fell quietly from the shelves yet survived by dint of word of mouth alone. We also wanted to add representative books from our brothers and sisters in Africa and the Caribbean, whose experiences have so closely paralleled the experiences of African Americans.
We anticipate that arguments will be made around the inclusion or exclusion of one book or another within this list of the essential one hundred. This, too, is part of our process. For certainly, when one discusses essential African American books, one can easily surpass one hundred.
Still, I would be remiss in not recommending Toni Cade Bambara’s Gorilla, My Love, Wole Soyinka’s Ake, Gayle Jones’s Corregidora, and Paul Beatty’s White Boy Shuffle or Sapphire’s Push, both stylistic breakthrough novels of the ‘90s. These, too, should be enjoyed.
A number of noteworthy books that direct readers through African American literary history can be found in bookstores and libraries. The most recent of those, the Norton Anthology of African American Literature, joins the Oxford, Companion to African American Literature and Howard University Press’s The New Cavalcade: African American Writing from 1760 to the Present, Vols. I and II, as excellent primers to our world in literature. Those anthologies, along with this book, support a strong argument for the recognition of an African American literary canon, a functional canon that serves as a respite—a community safe-house—to which to turn when the going gets rough. Yes, the books in our canon must work as literature, but they must also reach the heart. And they must speak to communal truths.
The Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary definition of canon as a criterion or standard of judgment
begs the question, Whose standards? What cultural criteria are to be met in order to gain inclusion within the list of books deemed authoritative
? This will continue as a hotly debated issue, given the continuing shift in the American population, the browning
of the American classroom, and the increasing number of culturally diverse voices being brought to print. Perhaps it is time to develop a more functional, world literary canon—a more inclusive and accepted body of work that serves cultures individually and nurtures a sense of community globally.
African American literature is the story of the African in the new Americas. It is a history of a people in transition and inner turmoil as we seek, still, to find a place within a society that has institutionalized its efforts to relegate blackness to its bottom rung. Ours, then, is an autobiography of protest and struggle for recognition, of achievement and survival.
Our earliest achievements in public letters and writings, protestations to enslavement, were autobiographical: the slave narrative. Even then, and beyond the telling of their plight, the writing was an attempt at proving an intellectual and moral capability and, by extension, the humanity of the enslaved African. Even the reality of post-Reconstruction and the advent of a covert American apartheid could not dim our urge to freedom.
And so with emancipation, we packed our belongings, knowing that if only the opportunity existed, we would show we were possessed of the will to thrive. To St. Louis, Chicago, New York, and all points north, east, and west, we migrated in search of better lives as free women and men, free to grow as a community, free as individuals to contribute to the ideal that was America.
It is from this community history that QBR selects the one hundred most representative books within the African experience in the Americas—-books that are significant in that they represent visions and aspirations, or a turning in thought, attitude, or perspective within our evolution as citizens in the New World.
And because they mark the passage of our time on this earth, because they contain our parents’ wisdom and ours, because they validate our sense of I am, and because they leave an indelible record of our contribution to the cultures of the world, we deem them essential both to us and to those who follow. We encourage you to create your own personal list of books so that you may pass our selections, along with yours, on to your friends and loved ones. Our compilation of the books with the greatest impact on us will be a project that lasts into the new millennium; we will continue to record these works on our web site (www.QBR.com). We would be honored to post your favorites. E-mail us or reach us by post.
May you read and prosper. We continue . . .
—Max Rodriguez
Origins, Ancestors, and Memory
Commentary
by Charles Brooks
The late John Henrik Clarke, in his essay Why Africana History,
stated: History, I have often said, is a clock that people use to tell their political time of day. It is also a compass that people use to find themselves on the map of human geography. History tells a people where they have been and what they have been. It also tells a people where they are and what they are. Most importantly, history tells a people where they still must go and what they still must be.
Dr. Clarke powerfully underlined the importance of grasping and understanding African and African American history because of its connection to the collective fate of a people. Simply put, If you don’t know your past, you don’t know your future.
Writers from throughout the African Diaspora have created—and not without struggle—an impressive body of work documenting their origins as a people and reclaiming their right to remember the past. This has been one of the central functions of African American literature. Why has this task been so important? Because our history has often been erased, misrepresented, and used as a tool against us, when in fact it should be the most powerful tool of our empowerment. The truths of our history have been twisted and threatened with extinction—a situation that should be as lamentable to other peoples of the world as it is to people of African descent. Why? Because the real story of our origins, our ancestors, and our quest to remember is a compelling and, ultimately, deeply inspiring story—a gift bequeathed by our finest writers to us and to the world.
This section, Origins, Ancestors, and Memory,
profiles and excerpts nineteen works, spanning two hundred years. These works speak volumes about who we were and who we are, and they provide a vision for what we have yet to achieve. They also provide an opportunity to share the hopes and dreams, pains and sorrows of our ancestors. The section begins by profiling two vital slave narratives, the first literary device used by African Americans to tell their story: The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano by Olaudah Equiano, and the redoubtable Narrative of the Life and Times of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass. It also includes two of the earliest works of fiction created by African Americans, Clotel by William Wells Brown and Our Nig by Harriet E. Wilson. These early literary efforts were created as a response against the oppressive social institution of slavery. These books do more than retell the familiar story of slavery—they tell it from the perspective of the men and women who lived through it, who felt the pain of bondage and abuse, and who, instead of crumbling, took pen and paper in hand to speak out and make sure the horrible truth would not be ignored or forgotten.
Also profiled are works of history that chronicle the experiences of Africans from the earliest civilizations of antiquity to the contemporary era. Works such as John Hope Franklin’s From Slavery to Freedom, Lerone Bennett’s Before the Mayflower, and Ivan Van Sertima’s controversial They Came Before Columbus, pioneering works of history that describe the varied experiences of people of African descent—not just the story of recent oppressions. Other works in this section speak to the need of black people interpreting the African and the African Diaspora historical experience for themselves. Included in this category is the seminal classic Stolen Legacy by George