Book-Mini Review: Organic Black Feminism Within Traditional Black Community Activism


Lucile H. Bluford and The Kansas City Call: Activist Voice for Social Justice.
Shelia Brooks and Clint C. Wilson II.
Lexington Books. 112 pp., $80.

The story of how Lucile Bluford helped lead Black Kansas City from the late 1960s through the 1980s via her newspaper, The Kansas City Call, is not unusual, as 20th century Black press stories go. And that very normality is what makes this monograph important. When not roadblocked by Black male sexism (and even when they are), Black women seek, and fight, to save, heal and transform the entire Black community–to save it from itself, even if that work results in personal attack and vicious slander. These women, like Bluford, are strategic. And Brooks and Wilson explain that tactical nature, along with that unswerving commitment, in qualitative and quantitative form, showcasing well her roles as local activist, cheerleader and critic. In the Twitter Age, one in which Black feminist perspectives often lead national Black (digital) activist discourse, Bluford’s brand would today hold up as well as her electric typewriter on the book’s cover: she often used a male pseudonym when it was time to talk tough. But that is not the point here, although that historic action of Black press female reporters and editors should be the focus of future 19th and 20th century Black newspaper studies. Happily, there is no attack and slander in Bluford’s story, because she earned the respect of Kansas City as its Black informational leader and independent advocate. Future monographs about 20th century Black press publishers, reporters and editors should explain in further detail the ideological/personal relationships between Black newspaper staffs and Black activists, especially the idea that the Black women who have always driven local Black activism were major portions of these papers’ audiences. But for now, with more books published on Black women journalists in recent years than ever before, academia is now seeing a significant growth in the topic of Black press herstory.

Why Newark Mayor Ras Baraka Is Getting Re-Elected Tonight

This is a good audio summary from WNYC-FM (New York’s NPR affiliate).Β  It’s been four years since memory, history and community service collided.

Asante Sana, James H. Cone

THANK YOU so much for your work!

I only read one of your books, but I very much enjoyed it and found it very useful!

We are using our liberation intellectuals. Sadly, our current group sees this as just an intellectual pursuit, not a passionate documentation of resistance. Black history is supposed to sting on the page, and people like Cone, Ronald Walters, Lerone Bennett Jr., etc. understood this!

THANKS TO…….

…..the IMIXWHATILIKE Crew for the opportunity, Highline College and Seattle Central College for their commitment to us,

and TERP magazine for this article!

And a special thanks to Dr. Darryl Brice and Sister Yoshiko Harden for hosting us while in Seattle!

My Latest Book Review, About The Power Of The 20th Century Black Press……

….is here.

About That Ida B. Wells Obit In The New York Times

Sure, it’s a good thing. But as an author of a new book on Ida, I just wanted to point out that she was also consistently “overlooked” while she was alive, not only by white racists in the North and the South, but also by the NAACP and Black male (and white liberal) leaders. *COUGH*Carter G. *COUGH*W.E.B.*COUGH* πŸ™‚Β  (The NAACP publicly pretended it, not her, started the organized fight against lynchings!)Β In fact, such treatment is a major part of my book.

So, no, it’s no surprise that The New York Times ignored her; of course it did!