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Bearden's Evocation of the Sirens episode in the Odyssey |
I’m
in New York City to talk tomorrow at Columbia Uni about the presence of the
Odyssey in African American culture, more specifically in the paintings and
collages of Romare Bearden. The trials of Odysseus, in Bearden’s many
Homer-inspired artworks, provide a mythic counterpoint to the painful journey
constituting African American history—conflict, captivity, loss, struggle,
sea-passage, exile, threatened identity.
An
early expression of the identification of people of the African diaspora with
Odysseus was the 1939 Cahier d'un retour au pays natal (Notebook
of a Return to the Native Land) by Aimé Césaire of Martinique. In 1952 Ralph Waldo Ellison published his seminal
Odyssean novel Invisible Man (1952),
a dazzling indictment of the continuing oppression of Americans of African
descent. I read this novel in twenty-four
hours one freezing Christmas while looking after a child in a Dundee hospital.
I have never recovered. It affected me, personally, far more than Derek Walcott’s Caribbean epic Omeros, albeit the greatest ‘Homeric’ poem
of the twentieth century.
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Nigel Thatch as Malcom X in Selma |
But
the date tomorrow is February 21st. Most
Manhattanites who might otherwise have come to discuss Bearden will probably be
at events marking the fiftieth anniversary of the assassination of
Malcolm X. He, too, was fascinated by the ancient world. In the Norfolk Penal
Colony, Massachusetts, he rapidly educated himself in Greek and Roman history
from Story of Civilisation by Will
and Ariel Durant, from Homer and Aesop’s Fables.
He subsequently inspired a generation of African Americans to learn about the
ancient empires.
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Oyelowo as Enslaved Prometheus |
The
meeting between him and Martin Luther King is beautifully handled in the new movie Selma, commemorating another fiftieth anniversary--that of the 1965 Alabama Civil Rights marches. That David Oyelowo has not been
nominated for an Oscar for his performance as Dr King, when the omnipresent Bradley
Cooper is in the running for manically eyeballing his Remington M40 in American Sniper, is utterly beyond me. Oyelowo wowed me years ago in the Aeschylean
tragedy Prometheus Bound, to the
extent that I put him on the cover of a book, Ancient Slavery and Abolition, of which I am very proud and
concerning which Henry Louis Gates actually sent an email of moderate appreciation.
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Bearden's Visualisation of the Cicones episode in the Odyssey |
What
I would really like now is a film version of the Odyssey starring Oyelowo as Odysseus and Beyoncé (with some arias) as
Penelope. If permitted a small role as an aged housekeeper or a Laestrygonian
she-giant I would be more than happy to act as academic consultant.
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