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Crazy as Hell

The Best Little Guide to Black History

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

By turns hilarious, candid, and heartbreaking, this powerful book takes the straitjacket off Black history.

A refreshing, insightful, sacrilegious take on African American history, Crazy as Hell explores the site of America's greatest contradictions. The notables of this book are the runaways and the rebels, the badass and funky, the activists and the inmates—from Harriet Tubman, Nina Simone, and Muhammad Ali to B'rer Rabbit, Single Mamas, and Wakandans—but are they crazy as hell, or do they simply defy the expectations designated for being Black in America?

With humor and insight, scholars and writers V. Efua Prince and Hoke S. Glover III (Bro. Yao) offer brief breakdowns of one hundred influential, archetypal, and infamous figures, building a new framework that emphasizes their humanity. Including an introduction by MacArthur Fellow Reginald Dwayne Betts and peppered with little-known historical facts and PSAs that get real about the Black experience, Crazy as Hell captures the tenacious, irreverent spirit that accompanies a long struggle for freedom.

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    • Kirkus

      June 1, 2024
      Two cultural studies scholars offer a darkly humorous guide to Black history. In this collaboration, Glover and Prince seek to challenge views that Black Americans are solely defined by the brutality of their history. Toward that end, the authors organize the text around the great cultural "luminaries" who have not only "transcend[ed] the boundaries" imposed on Black Americans, but also demonstrated their (very human) imperfections by showing themselves to be "crazy as hell." The authors gather those figures under categories they see as representative of important Black cultural archetypes. Glover and Prince begin with "The Runaway," offering brief stories of well-known enslaved people who were able to escape--e.g., Harriet Tubman, who returned to the South "at least nineteen times" to lead other enslaved people to freedom, and Frederick Douglass, who taught himself to read and write and beat up a former master who mistreated him. Several categories, including "The Badass," "The Outlaw," and "The Lawless," emphasize the way the heroes discussed in those sections (Muhammad Ali, Assata Shakur, Shirley Chisholm, Jack Johnson) were not only "bold enough to do something other folks [considered] crazy," but also courageous enough to show no fear in evading unfair laws. Other sections, including "The Funky" and "The Black Intellectual and The Activist," emphasize the fabulously boundary-breaking creativity and thinking demonstrated by brilliant eccentrics, from funk music godfather George Clinton and writer Zora Neale Hurston to Flavor Flav, Erykah Badu, and the Wu-Tang Clan. The final section introduces "The Unwitting Representatives of the Anonymous Masses," a category that includes Emmett Till, Trayvon Martin, Sandra Bland, and George Floyd. As it entertains and enlightens, this book also makes readers keenly aware that the "craziness" demonstrated by Black heroes is a direct response to the madness of a racist American society. An entertainingly provocative and informative reading experience.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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