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African American Science fiction, African American Studies, Blacks in American Utopian Literature, Blue Sky for Black America by Jesse Rhines, Hopefulness for Black youth, Jesse Rhines
Book Cover: Blue Sky for Black America:
100 Years of Colored People in Western Utopian Literature
by Jesse Rhines Ph.D
The book, Blue Sky for Black America: 100 Years of Colored People in Western Utopian Literature, captured my interest as a lover of science fiction. Based on his early experience as an IBM Systems Engineer Trainee, the author Jesse Rhines applies IBM’s “blue sky” utopian approach to formulating its hundred-year projection in addressing urban hopelessness among underclass Black youth. He argues that hopelessness, a future oriented condition, requires a future oriented solution.
To facilitate this process, Rhines analyzes one hundred years of Western Utopian literature featuring Black Americans. Beginning with the pre-World War II period, he examines two classic futuristic novels by Edward Bellamy and Aldous Huxley. Blacks remain servants and are depicted as backwards, uncivilized, and rapists.
After World War II, the geopolitical situation changed with the foundation of the United Nations, a multiracial organization based on equality, freedom, and justice for all member states. With the desegregation of the Armed Forces and the Black Civil Rights Movement led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., a new kind of science fiction emerged: the futuristic space drama exemplified by the TV series, Star Trek, first aired in 1966.
While the Star Trek series aimed to reflect the new spirit of the United Nations, Rhines notes that only one among the hundreds of planets visited was dominated by non-white humanoids. Over 99 percent of the humanoid aliens were of European ancestry. With few exceptions, Afro-humanoids appear as the most violent and uncivilized people in the Universe.
After the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., whites feared that militant Blacks would upset the racial hierarchy. This led to a new kind of dystopian science fiction. Rhines dissects five such works published between 1969 and 1971. In a world brought to the brink of destruction by white people, Blacks stand out as vile, immoral, and intellectually inferior to whites. Dr. King’s dream of global fellowship becomes a nightmare.
By the mid-1970s, with the need to address racism, American futuristic novels merged utopian and dystopian elements in their portrayal of societies in transition. But it was white feminist authors who led the move to incorporate Black Americans’ most radical goals into their imagined futures. Rhines also explores two novels, one by an African American, that go further in conceiving a multicultural utopia.
The revival of African American science fiction in the 1990s offers little hope for a better future. The majority feature dystopian worlds in which Blacks struggle against white American society.
Rhines concludes that “Black people are rarely willing to…even imagine themselves in an ideal socio-political situation, untempered by the demands, wishes, domination or power of Europeans” (98). To develop positive images of the future, he recommends that African American high school students read utopian literature and write their own stories of alternative ways of life. “By orienting students toward the future and their own place in it, we will stimulate in them hopefulness and feelings of agency” (101).
Would Rhines’ futuristic approach work for stimulating hopefulness among underclass Black Guyanese youth?
JESSE RHINES is a professor of African American Studies. He holds an M.A. in African American Studies from Yale University and a Ph.D. in Ethnic Studies from the University of California, Berkeley. He is author of the Gustavus Mayer Human Rights Award winning book Black Film/White Money and the 2011 book Black Havard/Black Yale. Blue Sky for Black America was published in November 2014.
Multi-cultural utopia, peace and harmony sounds great! “Hopefulness and feeling of agency” will be helpful to set the stage, end any vicious cycle and make good happen..
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Agree with you, Cicorm. I do believe that Jesse Rhines is on to something very important.
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I cannot answer your last question, but wonder about the author’s characterization of the Star Trek universe. I was a faithful viewer and can recall some pretty strange creatures. I also think the series was groundbreaking in terms of having two flight-deck officers who were non-white, not to mention Mr. Spock, who was light green and sported pointy ears and a far-from European view of the world. Indeed, he was famous for relying on logic to the exclusion of emotion — almost computer like. The first black-white kiss on network TV happened on Star Trek and there was even an episode in which two especially peculiar societies were at war. One was black on the right side of the body and white on the left, while the other had the same colors in the reverse position, a clear comment on the stupidity of prejudice at the time it was aired (the mid-60s).
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Dr. Stein, thanks for sharing your views about the Star Trek universe. I’ve only seen a few episodes of the series, but have seen recent remakes for the cinema. As I learned in Rhines’ book, the series ran for over thirty years and became an international success. For this reason, Rhines devotes an entire chapter on analyzing the Star Trek as Utopia.
In Rhines’ analysis, the big “interracial kiss” in “Plato’s Stepchildren” (1968) was “written as not the result of affection but of coercion by aliens.” He goes on to discuss details of the actual filming of the kiss from the viewpoint of the African American actress, Nichelle Nichols.
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for the re-blog, Cyril. May the Force be with you!
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Rosie
To answer the question at the end…..on futuristic approach.
Doubt it !
Literacy and numeracy the basics for enlightenment of Guyana s youths.
Tools of the trade are as important as the trade itself.
Give them the tools to discover their dreams.
Zero tolerance…..100% literacy numeracy.
Way forward.
SciFi certainly not……fantasy ! Our world is real.
Sorry ways I see it.
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Thanks for sharing your vision, Kamtan. Literacy is indeed the first step. I plan to address Guyana’s situation in my next blog post.
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Reblogged this on belladeclou9.
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Bella, thanks for the re-blog.
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Hi Rosaliene,
After reading Jesse Rhines article, it brings to mind, we must believe in hope, hope is the key to change. A good change is the key to hopefulness. Our black youths need guidelines, direction. Education plays a vital role in one’s life.
Bella
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Bella, thanks for sharing your thoughts on Rhines’ book. I agree that education is vital.
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As a younger brother of Mr. Rhines, I can’t thank you enough for making me familiar with the theme of his book, “Blue Sky…”. As to the hope for the future being in literacy and numeracy, Science Fiction is an interactive study of both. Jesse introduced me to the genre when we were both boys, and I appreciate the insight I gained from reading the novels of Robert Heinlein and Kurt Vonnegut. Though he told me of his book, I never grasped its content until this review. I am now excited to read this, for the theme resounds with my vision and effort to resolve the racial impasse in society. On the subject of the future, I offer the following poem, with the commentary and newslink, which inspired it.
Police thuggery to reinforce a slave mentality is the hallowed tradition passed down from the slave patrol, the KKK, and the Citizen Councils into today’s policing.
http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/young-texas-politician-tased-by-police/
The charges against the man are false as he was “interfering” not, but tending to a unwarranted police matter on his own property. He did not “resist arrest” as he was never told that he was under arrest. He resisted police thuggery, which the chief allows, encourages, and defends, at the end of the video report.
For the Future
If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, then a whole lot of people must be blind.
Mental deception by a racist infection has driven lots of people to lose their mind!
Lost in the time of a historyless place,
Many people think there’s no future to face.
Sealed in the hold of a kidnapper’s space,
Who has reserves of either charm or grace?
The voice of the free remains entangled within,
Memories of nooses slipped beneath the chin,
Debris of grief caused by arrogant sin,
Ruins of flames that char home and skin.
What spirit cloud can rain down a flood,
To wash away wounds and clean up the blood,
Where truth has no grammar and love, no syntax,
And honor has no root and hate has no lacks?
If the human bond is not enough,
To make such a steam to rise up and fluff,
If our agenda is not reparation,
The calendar delivers to us, condemnation,
Where blindness persists and beauty is lost,
Because minds cannot grasp an equitable cost,
And cowardly fear rules us day and night!
For our sake, for the future, just get justice right.
By Julian Steptoe
© Oct 12, 2015 2:05AM
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Mr. Steptoe, I’m pleased to know that my review of Blue Sky for Black America has given you a better appreciation of your brother’s work. A study of this nature requires careful analysis. As a former high school teacher and science fiction fan, I believe that Rhines’ proposal is of great value not only to underclass Black American youth, but also to the Caribbean youth.
Sadly, police brutality against Black Americans persists. The struggle continues.
Thanks for sharing your poem, “For the Future.” The line “Mental deception by a racist infection has driven lots of people to lose their mind!” expresses well the racist attitudes set in place in our not-so-distant past. Today, dystopian futuristic novels and movies, like the popular “Hunger Games” series, warn us that we are headed in the wrong direction.
“May the odds ever be in [our] favor!”
(from “The Hunger Games”).
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Excellent post, Rose. Rhines is an important academic, writer, and thinker. I think sadly about Dr. Stein’s summary of StarTrek and have to agree with Kamptan’s. And the trail of hope expressed – living without hope is an unremitting nightmare.
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Thanks, Angela.
I share your view, so well expressed, that “living without hope is an unremitting nightmare.”
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Reblogged this on wisebyond.
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