A black bourgeoisie perspective on U.S. politics
Yesterday I started getting all these calls/emails/facebook msgs/tweets saying essentially OMG you’re on C-SPAN, what the hizzy! I was delighted to be invited to speak at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School on Nov 30 to rap to some people who were seriously way smarter than me about my experiences using the internetz to get into all kinds of trouble.
My talk was called “Black Power 2.0: Rise of African-American Online Political Influentials”. The Shorenstein Center folks wrote up a nice summary. You can watch the video for yourself (fyi…sorry C-SPAN is not allowing an embed right now so click over to their site from the screenshot above). The Shorenstein Center has a lot of really good articles and great speakers from the front lines of innovative public engagement so you should check out their site fo sho. They got events like the one with me, publications and research.
Bottom line, the hip hop generation is re-defining black power and our combined energies amplified and accelerated via social media is creating a seismic change across every facet of American culture in a similar fashion to the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s/30s. It’s like how Fabolous says:
I’m a movement by myself
But I’m a force when we’re together
Mami, I’m good all by myself
But baby, you, you make me better
From the Shorenstein Center:
At a Shorenstein Center event, Cheryl Contee, partner at Fission Strategy and co-founder of the political blog Jack & Jill Politics, explored the “Rise of African-American Online Political Influentials.” Contee said that she sees herself not as a figure of the media or of politics, but as “a concerned citizen working toward positive change.”
Contee launched Jack & Jill Politics in 2006 as a response to what she described as the “digital divide” between African Americans and the white audiences that are most often targeted by new media. A new generation comprised of “children of the Civil Rights era coming of age with new confidence,” Contee said, have “highly trained professional skills” and are “infused with passion from their parents” for progressive politics. This “new voice online,” Contee explained, is made up of a “group of political junkies” that are “cross cultural and collaborative,” but who also have a great deal of “irreverence” and speak out against traditional barriers.
When the blog first launched, Contee and her co-founder Baratunde Thurston used the pseudonyms Jill Tubman and Jack Turner. The pseudonyms were “driven by an element of fear” for protecting their reputations and careers, Contee explained. “No one had done this before,” she said, so the stakes were high. Since the 2008 election, Contee herself along with many other bloggers have “come out” with their true identities and now write and comment freely. Her hope is that the blog serves as “a vehicle to motivate people to activism” and “turn the national discourse around.”
Looking forward, Contee sees a “Harlem Renaissance 2.0” that, like the historical movement, will “not only change African-American society but change U.S. society for the good.” She is encouraged by the “emergence of interesting and progressive African Americans,” and “is keen to educate audiences on topics like net neutrality, racial profiling and location-based services.” A large percentage of her readership is non-African American, and Contee sees the “rich dynamism” of cross-cultural collaboration. The benefits of new media tools, Contee concluded, is that they “provide social advantages” for African Americans that make up for previous social disadvantages. New media is a “mechanism people are using to leap over barriers that have kept out people in the past,” she said.
This article was written by Janell Sims…
Many special thanks to Alex S. Jones and Edith Holway of the Joan Shorenstein Center at Harvard.
Cheryl Contee aka "Jill Tubman", Baratunde Thurston aka "Jack Turner", rikyrah, Leutisha Stills aka "The Christian Progressive Liberal", B-Serious, Casey Gane-McCalla, Jonathan Pitts-Wiley aka "Marcus Toussaint," Fredric Mitchell
Special Contributors: James Rucker, Rinku Sen, Phaedra Ellis-Lamkins, Adam Luna, Kamala Harris
Technical Contributor: Brandon Sheats