Jeff Chang (INTERVIEW)
Jeff Chang
The “Who We Be” Interview
with Kam Williams
Visionary Author Talks about His NAACP Image Award-Nomination
Jeff Chang is a new sage thinker with his finger on the
pulse of
American culture. His first book, the critically-acclaimed “Can’t Stop Won't Stop: A
history of the Hip-Hop Generation,” collected a cornucopia of honors, including
the American Book Award and the Asian-American Literary Award.
Next, he edited “Total Chaos: The Art and Aesthetics of
Hip-Hop,” an anthology of essays and interviews. Here, he talks about his
latest opus, “Who We Be: The Colorization of America,” which has been nominated
for an NAACP Image Award in the Outstanding Literary Work – Non-Fiction
category.
Don’t let yourself be dissuaded by the
grammatically-incorrect title, or it’s Ebonics chapter headings like “I Am I
Be” and “What You Got to Say?” for the actual text isn’t written in inscrutable
slang as implied, but rather makes a most articulate analysis of the evolution
of American society from the March on Washington to the present.
Kam Williams: Hi Jeff. Thanks for the time and congratulations on
the NAACP Image Award nomination for “Who We Be.” You used to just write about
hip-hop. What inspired you to expand your focus for this book?
Jeff Chang: When
I finished “Can't Stop Won't Stop,” I realized that the big hole was in talking
about all those who had influenced me during my intellectual awakening during
the mid-1980s and into 1990s. These were people from the generation that fell
between the gap of the Civil Rights Generation and the Hip-Hop Generation--teachers
and thinkers like Gary Delgado and Ron Takaki and Gloria Anzaldua, writers like
Ishmael Reed, Ntozake Shange, and Jessica Hagedorn. They helped to theorize
multiculturalism and their ideas carried us through the culture wars.
KW: Why did you decide to examine the evolution of American
culture over the last half-century?
JC: I guess every project
has been a little autobiographical--this is the era that I have lived through.
And now that I teach and mentor, I am always surprised and a little sad at how
little my students know about what people their age did during the 1980s and
1990s. We weren't silent. They hear endlessly about the proud brave youth of
the 1960s and even the 1970s, but not much history has been done on those who came
afterward. In part, this is a function of demographics--we are the shadow
generation between the so-called Boomers and Millennials. In part, ours is not
a history of glory and victory. When it comes to racial justice, it's been
quite the opposite. It's not a story with a happy ending.
KW: Where do you envision America to be a half-century from
now?
JC: I'm less successful
at predicting than I am at reading history. I do write from a sense of urgency,
though. I worry that if we don't move toward a consensus for racial justice,
that we'll instead continue the current trends of re-segregation and end up
with a more rigid, insurmountable racial caste system in 2042. That would be a
horrible outcome for everyone, including whites.
KW: Do you think you have a unique perspective as a
Chinese/Hawaiian- American?
JC: I've been blessed to
come from a background in which my family has intermarried with every race and
culture imaginable. My family looks a lot like President Obama's, but much
bigger. I suppose I look at the society I'm living in the way I look at my
family. Because we are family does not mean there aren't problems, but we owe
it to each other to keep on talking, to try to work them out. This may make me
a bit Pollyanna-ish, but you gotta believe in something, and every belief comes
from somewhere, and that's mine.
KW: “Who We Be” reminds me of Marshall McLuhan’s “The Medium Is
the Massage” [not his famous essay “The Medium Is the Message”] which was a
dizzying mix of essays, asides, aphorisms, photos and drawings. Are you
familiar with that book?
JC: I am! Dizzying was
exactly the right word. From the beginning I wanted the book to be visual--in
the writing and in its content and presentation. McLuhan pointed out in the
mid-60s, that we were now living in a mixed up culture where visuality was much
more important. The word "colorization" comes from TV, and this is
also happening right at the time McLuhan and Fiore are making their book. So,
in a lot of ways, I was trying to recognize that history, while merging that
with the history of the representation of people of color in the post-civil
rights era. Such a great question! Thank you.
KW: You’re welcome, Jeff. How would you describe your approach
to cobbling together the content you included in your book?
JC: The organizing
metaphor was seeing--how we see race. I knew I had to move in this direction
after “Can't Stop Won't Stop,” and I had some elements--Morrie Turner's
cartoons and his amazing life story, on the one hand, and the street art of the
Obama presidential campaign, on the other. Greg Tate, Lydia Yee, Roberta Uno,
Vijay Prashad and others hit me with other key pieces that helped to shape the
narrative. And as I was finishing the book, Vijay Iyer hit me sideways with his
insight about listening versus seeing race. He made me understand that jazz and
soul and blues are of an earlier period in which listening was central. Hip-hop
comes up in an era of seeing--and so it gets complicated.
KW: What message do you hope people will take away from the book?
JC: That we need to have
a real conversation about race that does not try to ignore the legacies of
discrimination, debasement and inequity. And we need to transform the culture
of violence that continues to lead us in each generation to have to explosively
protest the way that bodies of color, often specifically black bodies, are
targeted and contained. I think the best way for us to approach this is to
recognize and name re-segregation as we see it, and, through cultural
interventions, push toward a new consensus for racial justice.
KW: What do you make of the nationwide demonstrations in
response to the failure of the grand juries to indict the police officers in
the Eric Garner and Michael Brown cases?
JC: They are among the
most sustained and widespread protests against state violence against African-Americans
in history. And they are being organized and moved in a decentralized way by
thousands of ordinary Americans--mostly youths, mostly women. There are no
central leaders, despite the media's focus on some older charismatic men, and
that makes them impossible to stop. They give me clarity about my work and they
give me hope that we might be in a transformative moment.
KW: Is there any question no one ever asks you, that you
wish someone would?
JC: Not really. Every
question is a blessing.
KW: What was your first job?
JC: I went to a private
school on "scholarship" which meant that, at age 10, I was serving
lunch to my peers and wiping up the tables after them.
KW: What is your guiltiest pleasure?
JC: If it's pleasurable,
I ain't guilty! [LOL]
KW: The bookworm Troy Johnson question: What was the last book
you read?
JC: So
many! Two of the most recent have been especially amazing: Claudia Rankine's
“Citizen”
and my man Marlon James's “A Brief History of Seven
Killings.”
KW: The music maven Heather Covington question: What was
the last song you listened to?
JC: Again, so many. This
is what's on right now: Sade's "Love You More" [JRocc Mix] https://soundcloud.com/jrocc/love-you-more-rocc-mix
KW: What is your favorite dish to cook?
JC: Hawaiian-style Pipi, beef
stew.
KW: The Sanaa Lathan question: What excites you?
JC: Art: music, visual
art, literature, etcetera that connects big ideas and calls us to do something.
KW: Was there a meaningful spiritual component to your
childhood?
JC: Yes.
My grandparents were Buddhist and my parents converted to Catholicism. I'd say
my spiritual beliefs are some odd, contradictory hybrid of both.
KW: When you look in the mirror, what do you see?
JC: Someone who is
trying.
KW: If you could have one wish instantly granted, what would
that be for?
JC: Right
now it would be for my brother-in-law Arnel to be alive again. He passed away
suddenly in July.
KW: My condolences. The Ling-Ju Yen question: What is
your earliest childhood memory?
JC: Oh, man, I can't
remember!
KW: The Melissa Harris-Perry question: How did
your first big heartbreak impact who you are as a person?
JC: It made me understand
how important recognizing your transgressions is toward reaching
reconciliation.
KW: Can you give me a generic Jeff Chang question I can ask
other people I interview?
JC: What are the three
values that guide everything you do?
KW: Thanks! What advice do you have for anyone who wants
to follow in your footsteps?
JC: Don't follow me,
follow your own trail, and if it crosses mine for a while, welcome.
KW: The Tavis Smiley question: How do you want to be remembered?
JC: By my actions and my
children.
KW: And lastly, what’s in your wallet?
JC: The bare minimum I
need!
KW: Thanks again for the time, Jeff, and good luck with the
book.
JC: Kam, thanks for this amazing interview and for all
your generosity. With lots of respect and gratitude.
To become a member of the NAACP and to vote for the Image
Awards, visit: http://www.naacpimageawards.net/become-a-member-to-vote/
To order a copy of Who We Be, visit:
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