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105 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
105 lines
5.2 KiB
Plaintext
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# The Mundane Afrofuturist Manifesto
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The undersigned, being alternately pissed off and bored, need a means of speculation and asserting a different set of values with which to re-imagine the future. In looking for a new framework for black diasporic artistic production, we are temporarily united in the following actions.
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**The Mundane Afrofuturists recognize that:**
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We did not originate in the cosmos.
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The connection between Middle Passage and space travel is tenuous at best.
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Out of five hundred thirty-four space travelers, fourteen have been black. An all-black crew is unlikely.
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Magic interstellar travel and/or the wondrous communication grid can lead to an illusion of outer space and cyberspace as egalitarian.
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This dream of utopia can encourage us to forget that outer space will not save us from injustice and that cyberspace was prefigured upon a "master/slave" relationship.
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While we are often Othered, we are not aliens.
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Though our ancestors were mutilated, we are not mutants.
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Post-black is a misnomer.
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Post-colonialism is too.
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The most likely future is one in which we only have ourselves and this planet.
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**The Mundane Afrofuturists rejoice in:**
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Piling up unexamined and hackneyed tropes, and setting them alight.
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Gazing upon their bonfire of the Stupidities, which includes, but is not exclusively limited to:
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- Jive-talking aliens;
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- Jive-talking mutants;
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- Magical negroes;
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- Enormous self-control in light of great suffering;
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- Great suffering as our natural state of existence;
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- Inexplicable skill in the martial arts;
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- Reference to Wu Tang;
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- Reference to Sun Ra;
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- Reference to Parliament Funkadelic and/or George Clinton;
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- Reference to Janelle Monáe;
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- Obvious, heavy-handed allusions to double-consciousness;
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- Desexualized protagonists;
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- White slavery;
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- Egyptian mythology and iconography;
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- The inner city;
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- Metallic colors;
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- Sassiness;
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- Platform shoes;
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Continue at will…
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**We also recognize:**
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The harmless fun that these and all the other Stupidities have brought to millions of people.
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The harmless fun that burning the Stupidities will bring to millions of people.
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The imaginative challenge that awaits any Mundane Afrofuturist author who accepts that this is it: Earth is all we have. What will we do with it?
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The chastening but hopefully enlivening effect of imagining a world without fantasy bolt-holes: no portals to the Egyptian kingdoms, no deep dives to Drexciya, no flying Africans to whisk us off to the Promised Land.
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The possibilities of a new focus on black humanity: our science, technology, culture, politics, religions, individuality, needs, dreams, hopes, and failings.
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The surge of bedazzlement and wonder that awaits us as we contemplate our own cosmology of blackness and our possible futures.
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The relief of recognizing our authority. We will root our narratives in a critique of normative, white validation. Since "fact" and "science" have been used throughout history to serve white supremacy, we will focus on an emotionally true, vernacular reality.
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The understanding that our "twoness" is inherently contemporary, even futuristic. DuBois asks how it feels to be a problem. Ol’ Dirty Bastard says "If I got a problem, a problem's got a problem 'til it’s gone."
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An awakening sense of the awesome power of the black imagination: to protect, to create, to destroy, to propel ourselves towards what poet Elizabeth Alexander describes as "a metaphysical space beyond the black public everyday toward power and wild imagination."
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The opportunity to make sense of the nonsense that regularly—and sometimes violently—accents black life.
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The electric feeling that Mundane Afrofuturism is the ultimate laboratory for worldbuilding outside of imperialist, capitalist, white patriarchy.
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The sense that the rituals and inconsistencies of daily life are compelling, dynamic, and utterly strange.
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Mundane Afrofuturism opens a number of themes and flavors to intertextuality, double entendre, politics, incongruity, polyphony, and collective first-person—techniques that we have used for years to make meaning.
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**The Mundane Afrofuturists promise:**
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To produce a collection of Mundane Afrofuturist literature that follows these rules:
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1. No interstellar travel—travel is limited to within the solar system and is difficult, time consuming, and expensive.
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2. No inexplicable end to racism—dismantling white supremacy would be complex, violent, and have global impact.
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3. No aliens unless the connection is distant, difficult, tenuous, and expensive—and they have no interstellar travel either.
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4. No internment camps for blacks, aliens, or black aliens.
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5. No Martians, Venusians, etc.
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6. No forgetting about political, racial, social, economic, and geographic struggles.
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7. No alternative universes.
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8. No revisionist history.
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9. No magic or supernatural elements.
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10. No Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, or Bucks.
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11. No time travel or teleportation.
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12. No Mammies, Jezebels, or Sapphires.
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13. Not to let Mundane Afrofuturism cramp their style, as if it could.
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14. To burn this manifesto as soon as it gets boring.
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— Martine Syms & whomever will join me in the future of black imagination.
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---
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Source: http://rhizome.org/editorial/2013/dec/17/mundane-afrofuturist-manifesto/
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