Afrofuturism is a cultural aesthetic,
philosophy of science, and philosophy of history that explores the developing
intersection of African/African-American culture with technology. It combines
elements of science fiction, historical fiction, fantasy, Afrocentrism and
magic realism with non-Western cosmologies in order to critique the present-day
dilemmas of black people and to interrogate and re-examine historical events.
It was explored in the late 1990s through conversations led by Alondra Nelson.
Afrofuturism addresses themes and concerns of the African diaspora through a
technoculture and science fiction lens, encompassing a range of media and
artists with a shared interest in envisioning black futures that stem from
Afrodiasporic experiences. Seminal Afrofuturistic works include the novels of
Samuel R. Delany and Octavia Butler; the canvases of Jean-Michel Basquiat and
Angelbert Metoyer, and the photography of Renée Cox; the explicitly
extraterrestrial mythoi of Parliament-Funkadelic, the Jonzun Crew, Warp 9,
Deltron 3030, and Sun Ra; and the Marvel Comics superhero Black Panther.
History:
Despite Afrofuturism being coined in 1993,
scholars tend to agree that Afrofuturistic music, art and text became more
common and widespread in the late 1950s. The Afrofuturist approach to music was
first propounded by Sun Ra. Born in Alabama, Sun Ra's music coalesced in
Chicago in the mid-1950s, when with the Arkestra he began recording music that
drew from hard bop and modal sources, creating a new synthesis that used
Afrocentric and space-themed titles to reflect Ra's linkage of ancient African
culture, specifically Egypt, and the cutting edge of the Space Age. For many
years, Ra and his bandmates lived, worked and performed in Philadelphia while touring festivals
worldwide. Ra's film Space Is the Place shows The Arkestra in Oakland in the mid-1970s in full space
regalia, replete with science-fiction imagery as well as other comedic and
musical material. As of 2018, the band was still composing and performing,
under the leadership of Marshall Allen.
Afrofuturist ideas were taken up in 1975 by
George Clinton and his bands Parliament and Funkadelic with his magnum opus
Mothership Connection and the subsequent The Clones of Dr. Funkenstein, P-Funk
Earth Tour, Funkentelechy Vs. the Placebo Syndrome, and Motor Booty Affair. In
the thematic underpinnings to P-Funk mythology ("pure cloned funk"), Clinton in his alter ego
Starchild spoke of "certified Afronauts, capable of funkitizing
galaxies".
Other musicians typically regarded as
working in or greatly influenced by the Afrofuturist tradition include reggae
producers Lee "Scratch" Perry and Scientist, hip-hop artists Afrika
Bambaataa and Tricky, electronic musicians Larry Heard, A Guy Called Gerald,
Juan Atkins, Jeff Mills, Newcleus and Lotti Golden & Richard Scher, electro
hip hop producer/writers of Warp 9's "Light Years Away", a sci-fi
tale of ancient alien visitation, described as a "cornerstone of early
80's beatbox afrofuturism".
In the early 1990s, a number of cultural
critics, notably Mark Dery in his 1994 essay "Black to the Future",
began to write about the features they saw as common in African-American
science fiction, music, and art. Dery dubbed this phenomenon "Afrofuturism".
According to cultural critic Kodwo Eshun, British journalist Mark Sinker was
theorizing a form of Afrofuturism in the pages of The Wire, a British music
magazine, as early as 1992.
Afrofuturist ideas have further been
expanded by scholars like Alondra Nelson, Greg Tate, Tricia Rose, Kodwo Eshun,
and others. In an interview, Alondra Nelson explained Afrofuturism as a way of
looking at the subject position of black people which covers themes of
alienation and aspirations for a utopic future. The idea of "alien"
or "other" is a theme often explored. Additionally, Nelson notes that
discussions around race, access, and technology often bolster uncritical claims
about a so-called "digital divide". The digital divide overemphasizes
the association of racial and economic inequality with limited access to
technology. This association then begins to construct blackness "as always
oppositional to technologically driven chronicles of progress". As a
critique of the neo-critical argument that the future's history-less identities
will end burdensome stigma, Afrofuturism holds that history should remain a
part of identity, particularly in terms of race.
21st century
A new generation of recording artists have
embraced Afrofuturism into their music and fashion, including Solange Knowles,
Rihanna, and Beyoncé. This tradition continues from artists such as Erykah
Badu, Missy Elliott and Janelle Monáe, who incorporated cyborg themes and
metallics into their style. Other 21st century musicians who have been characterized
as Afrofuturist include singer FKA Twigs, musical duo Ibeyi, and DJ/producer
Ras G.
Janelle Monáe has made a conscious effort
to restore Afrofuturist cosmology to the forefront of urban contemporary music.
Her notable works include the music videos "Prime Time" and
"Many Moons", which explore the realms of slavery and freedom through
the world of cyborgs and the fashion industry. She is accredited with
proliferating Afrofuturist funk into a new Neo-Afrofuturism by use of her
Metropolis-inspired alter-ego, Cindi Mayweather, who incites a rebellion
against the Great Divide, a secret society, in order to liberate citizens who
have fallen under their oppression. This ArchAndroid role reflects earlier
Afrofuturistic figures Sun Ra and George Clinton, who created their own visuals
as extraterrestrial beings rescuing African-Americans from the oppressive
natures of Earth. Her influences include Metropolis, Blade Runner, and Star
Wars. The all Black Wondaland Arts Collective Society, of which Monáe is a
founder of, stated "We believe songs are spaceships. We believe music is
the weapon of the future. We believe books are the stars." Other musical artists to emerge since the turn
of the millennium regarded as Afrofuturist include dBridge, SBTRKT, Shabazz
Palaces, Heavyweight Dub Champion, and "techno pioneers" Drexciya
(with Gerald Donald).
The movement has grown globally in the
arts. Afrofuturist Society was founded by curator Gia Hamilton in New Orleans . Artists like
Demetrius Oliver from New York , Cyrus Kabiru
from Nairobi , Lina Iris Viktor from Liberia and Wanuri Kahiu of Kenya have all
steeped their work in the cosmos or sci-fi.
Afrofuturism Literature:
The creation of the term Afrofuturism in
the 1990s was often primarily used to categorize "speculative fiction that
treats African-American themes and addresses African-American concerns in the
context of 20th-century technoculture," but was soon expanded to include
artistic, scientific, and spiritual practices throughout the African diaspora.
Contemporary practice retroactively identifies and documents historical
instances of Afrofuturist practice and integrates them into the canon. For
example, the Dark Matter anthologies feature contemporary Black science
fiction, but also include older works by W. E. B. Du Bois, Charles W. Chesnutt,
and George S. Schuyler.
Lisa Yazsek argues that Ralph Ellison's
1952 novel, Invisible Man, should be thought of as a predecessor to
Afrofuturist literature. Yaszek illustrates that Ellison draws upon
Afrofuturist ideas that were not yet prevalent in African-American literature.
Ellison critiques the traditional visions of black people's future in the United States ,
but does not provide readers a different future to imagine. Yaszek believes
that Ellison does not offer any other futures so that the next generation of
authors can. Invisible Man may not be Afrofuturist in the sense that it does
not provide a better – or even any – future for black people in the United
States, but it can be thought of as a call for people to start thinking and
creating art with an Afrofuturist mindset. In this sense, Yaszek concludes that
Ellison's novel is a canon in Afrofuturistic literature by serving as call for
"this kind of future-historical art" to those who succeed him.
A number of contemporary Black science
fiction and speculative fiction authors have also been characterized as
Afrofuturist or as employing Afrofuturist themes. Nnedi Okorafor has been
labeled this way, both for her Hugo Award-winning Binti novella series, and for
her novel Who Fears Death. Steven Barnes has been called an Afrofuturist author
for his alternate-history novels Lion's Blood and Zulu Heart. N.K. Jemisin,
Nalo Hopkinson, and Colson Whitehead have also been referred to as Afrofuturist
authors. Octavia Butler’s novels are often associated with Afrofuturism; this
association has been somewhat controversial, since Butler incorporates multi-ethnic and
multi-species communities that insist on “hybridity beyond the point of
discomfort.” However, the fourth book of the science fiction Patternist series,
Wild Seed, particularly fits ideas of Afrofuturist thematic concerns, as the
narrative of two immortal Africans Doro and Anyanwu features science fiction
technologies and an alternate anti-colonialist history of seventeenth century America .
Afrofuturism Art
Museum and gallery exhibitions
In recent years, there have been many
museum exhibitions displaying art with Afrofuturist themes.
The Studio
Museum in Harlem
held a major exhibit exploring Afrofuturistic aesthetics from November 14, 2013
to March 9, 2014. The exhibit, called The Shadows Took Shape, displayed more
than sixty works of art that looked at recurring themes such as identity in
relation to technology, time, and space within African-American communities.
Artists featured in the exhibit included Derrick Adams, Laylah Ali and Khaled
Hafez.
As a part of the MOMA’s PS1 festival, King
Britt curated Moondance: A Night in the Afro Future in 2014. From noon to six
p.m. on April 13, people could attend Moondance and listen to lectures, live
music or watch dance performances in celebration of Afrofuturism in
contemporary culture.
In April 2016, Niama Safia Sandy curated an
exhibit entitled “Black Magic: AfroPasts / Afrofutures” at the Corridor Gallery
in Brooklyn , New York . The multidisciplinary art exhibit
looks at the relationship between magical realism and afrofuturism through the
Black diaspora. In a description of the collection, Sandy stated: “There’s a
lot of looking back and looking forward happening in this work…. [and there’s a
lot of] celebrating those journeys whether they are intentional or forced
journeys.”
Themes:
Feminism
Jared Richardson's Attack of the
Boogeywoman: Visualizing Black Women's Grotesquerie in Afrofuturism assesses
how the aesthetic functions as a space for black women to engage with the
intersection of topics such as race, gender, and sexuality. The representation
and treatment of black female bodies is deconstructed by Afrofuturist
contemporaries and amplified to alien and gruesome dimensions by artists such
as Wangechi Mutu and Shoshanna Weinberger.
Beyoncé's 2016 short film Lemonade included
feminist afrofuturism in its concept. The film featured Ibeyi, Laolu Senbanjo,
Amandla Stenberg, Quvenzhané Wallis, YouTube singing stars Chloe x Halle , Zendaya, 2015
Sports Illustrated Sportsperson of the Year Serena Williams, and the
sophisticated womanist poetry of Somali-British writer Warsan Shire. The
through-line is the empowerment of black women referencing both marital
relationships and the historical trauma from the enslavement of
African-Americans from 1619-1865,[not in citation given] through Reconstruction
and Jim Crow (1870–1965). The mothers of Trayvon Martin (Sybrina Fulton ), Michael Brown
(Lesley McFadden), Eric Garner (Gwen Carr) are featured holding pictures of
their deceased sons in homage to the importance of their lives. The novel
Kindred by Octavia Butler also explores the empowerment of women though the
story of her protagonist Dana. The book explores the idea of autonomy and having
control over one's life/destiny. Through the exploration of women's power in
the time of slavery to the more current time, Butler is able to demonstrate the endurance
of women through the harsh social factors.
The grotesque
In the Afro-Surreal Manifesto,
Afro-Surrealism is juxtaposed with European surrealism, with European
surrealism being empirical. It is consistent with the New Black Aesthetic in
that the art seeks to disturb. It samples from old art pieces updating them
with current images. This technique calls to the forefront those past images
and the sentiments, memories, or ideas around them and combines them with new
images in a way that those of the current generation can still identify. Both
seek to disturb, but there is more of a "mutant" psychology that is
going on. Afro-Futuristic artists seek to propose a deviant beauty, a beauty in
which disembodiment is both inhumane, yet distinct; Afro-Futuristic artists
speculate on the future, where Afro-Surrealism is about the present.
Alienation
Afrofuturism takes representations of the
lived realities of black people in the past and present, and reexamines the
narratives to attempt to build new truths outside of the dominant cultural
narrative. By analyzing the ways in which alienation has occurred, Afrofuturism
works to connect the African diaspora with its histories and knowledge of
racialized bodies. Space and aliens function as key products of the science
fiction elements; black people are envisioned to have been the first aliens by
way of the Middle Passage. Their alien status connotes being in a foreign land
with no history, but as also being disconnected from the past via the
traditions of slavery where slaves were made to renounce their ties to Africa in service of their slave master.
Kodwo Eshun locates the first alienation
within the context of the Middle Passage. He writes that Afrofuturist texts
work to reimagine slavery and alienation by using "extraterrestriality as
a hyperbolic trope to explore the historical terms, the everyday implications
of forcibly imposed dislocation, and the constitution of Black Atlantic
subjectivities". This location of dystopian futures and present realities
places science fiction and novels built around dystopian societies directly in
the tradition of black realities.
Water
In Afrofuturism, water in many different
works symbolizes both erasure and the existence of black life. These dual
meanings while seemingly contradictory actually play off and inform each other.
For instance, the middle passage can be considered where the first erasure
happened of African- American history. There are no stories that survived that
passage. As Ruth Mayer states, in the United States , "black history
is both there and not there, evident in countless traces, scars, and memories,
yet largely submerged when it comes to written accounts and first person
documentations of the past from the viewpoint of the victims." Yet, it is
through this erasure that Afrofuturism is able to craft histories. These
histories live both in fact and in fiction, as the true history was lost in the
waters of the Atlantic . Water erased the
history, but it also allowed for the creation of a new history.
This is where Afrofuturism comes into play.
To have a future, one's past must be defined. However, for African Americans,
though their "history" has been drowned, Afrofuturism resuscitates
this history. By its creation, it creates new possibilities for the future. In
Carrie Mae Weems' triptych Untitled (Ebo Landing), the Afrofuturism piece
crafts a space with two pictures that could be both African and America with
its depiction of lush greenery. In this way, the piece highlights how the
original space of water has given way in which Afrofuturism can imagine a past
or future that lives in the space of truth and fiction, the Schrödinger's cat
of African American past.
Another example of an Afrofuturist work
that deals specifically with the theme of water is 2009 film Pumzi, which
depicts an enclosed society in which water is utterly scarce and totally
conserved. The film's ambiguous ending leaves viewers wondering whether there
was a neighboring society with access to water the whole time, or if the main
character has died a heroine by planting a tree that will eventually bloom into
a whole forest.
Reclamation
Ostensibly, Afrofuturism has to do with
reclaiming the lost identities or lost perspectives that have been subverted or
overlooked. When Mark Dery first coined the term, he says Afrofuturism as
"giving rise to a troubling antinomy". This means that the seeming
contradiction of a past being snuffed out and the writing of a future sees its
possibilities in Afrofuturism. Furthermore, this Afrofuturism kind of story
telling is not regulated to one aspect of communication. It is in novels and
essays, academic writings and in music, but by its creation, it is ultimately reclaiming
some type of autonomy over one's story that has historically been restricted.
Therefore, when Afrofuturism manifests
itself in the music of the 80's and beyond, it is under the Afrofuturist's
sensibility. It is in this way that, as Mark Dery says, "African-American
culture is Afrofuturist at its heart". Because the ancestors of African
Americans were forcibly removed from their history, any culture that has found
its way into the Black lexicon is at its roots an Afrofuturist notion. It is at
its heart reclaiming a past erased and creating a future based on that
reimagined past.
Afrofuturism 2.0
Afrofuturism 2.0 was coined during an
exchange between Alondra Nelson and Reynaldo Anderson at the Alien Bodies
conference in 2013; where Anderson
noted that the previous definition was insufficient due to the rise of social
media and new technology. Following the publication of the co-edited volume
Afrofuturism 2.0: The Rise of Astro-Blackness, in the late 2010s, the Black
Speculative Arts Movement, a traveling art, comic, and film convention,
released a manifesto called Afrofuturism 2.0 and the Black Speculative Arts
Movement: Notes on a Manifesto. The manifesto was written by Reynaldo Anderson
at Harris-Stowe State University as an attempt to redefine and refit
Afrofuturism for the 21st century. The 2.0 volume and the manifesto defines
Afrofuturism 2.0 as "The early twenty-first century technogenesis of Black
identity reflecting counter histories, hacking and or appropriating the
influence of network software, database logic, cultural analytics, deep
remixability, neurosciences, enhancement and augmentation, gender fluidity,
posthuman possibility, the speculative sphere with transdisciplinary
applications and has grown into an important Diasporic techno-cultural Pan
African movement". Afrofuturism 2.0 is characterized by five dimensions to
include metaphysics, aesthetics, theoretical and applied science, social
sciences and programmatic spaces; and in the twenty-first century is no longer
bound to its original definition, as a term once dealing with cultural
aesthetics and the digital divide, but has been broaden to be known also as a
philosophy of science, metaphysics and geopolitics.
In this manifesto, Anderson acknowledges and accounts for the
changes in technology, social movements, and even philosophical changes in
modern society while also speculating as to how the Afrofuturist narrative will
be changed because of it. This is particularly in regards to the rise and boom
of social media platforms.
In conjunction with this, Los Angeles-based
artist Martine Syms penned an online article in 2013 called The Mundane
Afrofuturist Manifesto that is composed of a list of tenets that, supposedly,
all Mundane Afrofuturists recognize. Though the article is in part parodic and
sarcastic, it aims to identify and make light of overused tropes within
Afrofuturist works like "magical Negroes" or "references to Sun
Ra". Through this identification of "overused tropes" and a later
definition of rules to actually subvert these tropes entitled "The Mundane
Afrofuturist promise", Syms requests a new, updated vision for
Afrofuturist works, which falls in line with the framework of Afrofuturism 2.0.
From Wikipedia
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Afrofuturism
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