Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Ravi Howard Walks Like a Tree


My boy Ravi finally got his book out there. And it was worth the wait. Check him out as he gets interviewed by NPR's All Things Considered. Not too shabby. Hopefully he'll stoop to doing the Niggerati Manor podcast next month.

Ravi's Site.
Ravi's Southern Appearance Schedule
Ravi's book, Like Trees Walking.

Monday, January 29, 2007

ADR Podcast


Friday night, I guest-hosted a podcast with Carmen Van Kerckhove at addictedtorace.com. We discussed Barack Obama, Asian inter-racial dating, and Barry White. If you want to hear a painfully bad Barack Obama impression, you really should give it a listen. [Warning, I mutter "uhm" at least 800 times.]

I'm grateful to Carmen for the opportunity, particularly because participating gave me the chance to see how a tight podcast is run. Originally, I was hoping to have regular podcasts up on this site, but due to the poor functionality of the audio system I had set up, I had to suspend it. (I don't know if you listened to my attempts at earlier podcasts, but the microphone I was using was rubbish). This issue has now been remedied, and I want to start podcasting again very soon.

For the Niggerati Manor podcast, I'm planning to interview some writers with upcoming books, do some readings, and dialogue with some writers and literary critics. I'm also mulling over doing a regular pop culture discussion as well, most likely on a trial basis.

Stay tuned.

Sunday, January 28, 2007

"What You Swatting At?"


This is the video that has been looping in my head all week. It's crass, to some offensive, and I have not been able to stop laughing at it for years.

Like all great satire, it points out the absurdity of its target by taking that target's intellectual underpinnings to their logical extreme. Here the target is European-America's Reconstruction era fantasy of slavery, epitomized in the still vibrant corporate brand names of Aunt Jemima pancakes and Uncle Ben's rice. Of course, on our shelves today Aunt Jemima has been modernized to look like she could be the Secretary of State, but no one has forgotten her recent slave scarf past. In the video, see how Aunt Jemima busts into her husband's commercial with her huge smile and pile of pancakes, eager like the race traitor she is to coon it up for white America, as personified by the camera. It is all of black America that yells back at her, through Morgan, to shut up.

While satirizing one corporate icon, this Saturday Night Live sketch smartly links that attack to the same white supremacist notions about American chattel slavery that were also presented in the movie Song of the South: that slavery was an idyllic state for African Americans, who lived in childlike simplicity in the loving care of their captors. It is still rather stunning how many white Americans cling to that notion, that fantasy, and refuse to acknowledge the toxicity of the ideological roots behind such notions. Cut and paste this link to visit a Song of the South fan site to see an example of this: http://www.songofthesouth.net/ . They seem to me much like children nostalgically clinging to a worn out, now hazardous toy. It is from this movie that the clip takes its art direction: the perpetual sunsets, the flushed coloring, and of course the animated Disneyesque bluebirds fluttering on Uncle Jemima's shoulders. The latter leading to the funniest line in the piece, "What you swatting at?"

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Friday, January 26, 2007

J-Jo


Forgive me, but sometimes you have to get a little personal. I present my daughter, a.k.a. the black Pippi Longstocking.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

The Future of Publishing


Here is a really smart analysis of both the business history of modern publishing, and the possible future of the industry with print-on-demand technology. The onset of print-on-demand is something I've been eagerly awaiting since talk first started getting serious about the matter in the mid-1990s. Not only would this mean that no book would ever go out of print again, but it would also bring efficiency to an industry whose business model is in dire need of revision.

Check it out.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Zadie on Literary Failure


One of things I found fascinating about Zadie Smith's first interviews after the release of White Teeth was how conscious she seemed that the book, despite the hype that surrounded it, was still a flawed first novel. To me, that was the biggest indication that Smith was actually the real deal and not just a media creation.

In this essay, Zadie Smith breaks down the subject of literary failure, criticism, and honesty.

I can tell you in great detail what is wrong with every book I have ever written. I can tell you where I failed, and where I succeeded by pure accident. As a student of literary history, I can also tell you where I think some of the greatest novels in the English language falter as well. Novels are imperfect creations, much like their creators. Sometimes books with great failures manage to be great despite, and sometimes because of, their shortcomings.


Saturday, January 13, 2007

The Future of Niggerati Manor

When I was getting this thing off the ground in October, there was a reason I decided to call this blog Niggerati Manor instead of "Mat Johnson's Blog." Eventually, I intended to spin Niggerati Manor off from my own site and let it become true to its name: an online haven for the discussion and promotion of literature of the African Diaspora, conducted by the writers, readers, and scholars who comprise this world.

The black literary fiction world is a very small one, one often muted in comparison to the garish non-stop self-promotion of our commercial co-ethnicists. In addition to being a home for like minds, I hope that Niggerati Manor can also serve as a way of promoting our literature without cheapening it. Here, readers of one author could discover the works of others, and together we could build the cohesive audience that all of us, as writers and readers, would love to see. Here are my planned additions to the site in the months ahead:

Multiple Posters
I will invite more people than just myself to submit posts. These pieces wouldn't even have to be long, just long enough to stir discussion. They wouldn't even have to be original: bloggers could post them on their own sites as well as here, academics could (with permission) post articles they've written for other places here as well, or simply link to them.

Promotion of New Books
There are a handful of Black literary titles out every season. I would like to list them, just to tell people what's out there(hell, I don't even know half the time). This wouldn't have to be limited to just fiction either, as there is some great written poetry, literary nonfiction, and literary criticism that should be shouted out.

Promotion of Critical Theory
One of the things we desperately need as a community is more academic criticism done about our work. I would like to promote, publish, or link to critical theory that focuses on work of the current generation of black writers.

Coverage of Black Lit Events
I would like to get slide shows and videos from things like Calabash, Callaloo, Hurston/ Wright Writers Week, VONA, Harlem Book Fair, etc. Also, how cool would it be if people could post their individual readings here?

Podcasts
As soon as I get the money for a decent mixer, I would like to get some interviews up on here, and add more short story readings by myself and others. Also, people's independent bookstore readings could be put up as video podcasts as well.

Party
Niggerati Manor doesn't have to be just an online endeavor. I would like to throw an annual party. Let's take over a Brooklyn bar for a night and make a Niggerati Manor a physical place. Not everyone could make it obviously, but there is a major concentration of talent on the American east coast that would definitely be enough to fill the room. Pictures would follow.

Store
I would like to set up an online store, just a little Cafe Press-type job selling coffee mugs and sweatshirts and the like. The proceeds would go completely towards paying for this site's maintenance. If we gathered enough, we could make the above-mentioned party open bar. If we made more than that (extremely doubtful) we could donate it to Hurston/Wright. Is that selling out? Tell me.

None of this is anything new. In many ways, I'm copying what black alternative music sites such as Spitkicker.com and Okayplayer.com have already done to cultivate their collective audiences, just on a smaller level. That said, something like this could have a seismic impact on our artistic community simple because so little effective audience building has been done.

So, if you're one of the hundreds out there lurking through Niggerati Manor, and you would like to contribute in the coming year, drop me a line. If you have a book of black LITERARY fiction, poetry, or non-fiction or know about a good book coming out, drop me a line too.

Any thoughts? Other ideas? Criticism? Advice? Post a comment and let's talk this out.

Sincerely,

Mat Johnson
www.niggerati.com

PS-

For the record, I stole this whole idea from Mar in a post she put on her blog in 2005. Credit due.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Talking Back

When I first started up this site two months ago, I was hoping to start a dialogue about African American literature, conducted primarily by African American writers, readers and educators. This, to some extent, has already started happening. The interesting thing though is that most of this debate is not happening here, at niggeratimanor.com, but on the various sites and discussion boards that linked to the articles on African American literature I did in November and December.

Some of the responses to these essays are interesting, like this one from Monica Jackson, which deals with issues of writing and taste. I don't agree with much of it, but it's smart and on point. Some responses, including one exceptionally enlightend Okayplayer board discussion, were fruitful as well. I am particularly interested in people's objections to my ideas: some I find informative, some particularly uninformed, some amusing in their absurdity.

Since my schedule didn't allow me time to join into these discussions, let me now respond to some of the sentiments that were common among my critics:

THEM: Saying that you have to read books to write them is elitist.
ME: Yes, it is. Similarly, I feel strongly that only doctors who've studied medicine should practice it, only pilots who've had flight training should fly planes, and only cooks who've eaten food should be cooking. And I only buy albums from musicians who've heard a lot of music before they made their own. But I'm just snobby that way.

THEM: Not everyone needs an MFA.
ME: No, they really don't. The vast majority of great writers didn't have them. But for many like me, it can be of great assistance. It's just one route though, one I related because it was helpful to me. If you want to know how to gain some of the benefits of an MFA without going to one, check here. But let's repeat this together to avoid confusion: no one is saying you have to have an MFA to be a good writer (in fact, I've never heard anyone say that, ever). But you do have to read books. Sorry.

THEM: Not everyone can afford to get an MFA.
ME: True, and neither could I. That is why I paid for the entire thing using the guaranteed federal loans available to all U.S. Citizens, loans I'm still paying back. Please send donations to Mat Johnson's Sallie Mae Student Loan Fund. Phones are standing by.

THEM: Why does he just talk about Black literature, why doesn't he talk about white lit too?
ME: Why must every discussion we have be referenced to this other ethnic group? This is a discussion about African American literature, which is surely worth discussing exclusively from time to time. There are many similarities between what goes on in all of literature, and if you want to discuss those issues there are many sites out there to frequent. African American literature has its own peculiarities, its own context and history, and that is what this discussion is about.

THEM: I'm a commercial writer whose trying to pay my bills, this ain't got nothing to do with me.
ME: From a business standpoint, your market is now being flooded with books you have to compete with. The only way you can make your books stand out is by improving the quality of your work. But more importantly, why would you choose to be inept at your chosen profession?

THEM: He just hates contemporary fiction.
ME: I grew up on Stephen King, Anne Rice, Peter Straub, V.C. Andrews, Roger Zelazny, and Clive Barker. Today, I enjoy writers like Thomas Harris, Neil Gaiman, Terry Pratchett, and China Mieville. Walter Mosley crosses all kinds of genres, and I've been enjoying him for years. I love the wave of smart comic book writing from Garth Ennis, Brian K. Vaughn, Reginald Hudlin, and Warren Ellis. Good writing is good writing. I just don't like unimaginative, cliché-ridden writing.

THEM: That's stupid, a lot of published writers started as self-published writers.
ME: Yes, I know. In fact, in black commercial fiction that's nearly become the norm. But the issue here is not what words are on the bottom of a book's spine, but rather what words are inside that book. There are some contemporary writers who started by self-publishing yet have continued to push their craft. A good example of this is Brian Egeston, a writer who has always cared more about developing his talent than cashing in. I've read him over the years and have been inspired by his continued growth as an artist. Read a sample of his most recent novel to see what a self-taught, self-published author can accomplish, and if you like it please support him by buying a copy.

THEM: He says he's an excellent writer.
ME: Actually, I don't. I'm a capable writer, but I don't think any writer is capable of judging whether he or she is "excellent," or "important" or "great." Beware those that tell you they are. There are writers that I do know I am more advanced than. That is not because I'm particularly special, but instead because their writing is of such poor quality.

THEM: He's just player-hating commercial writers.
ME: Trust me, I'm not hating the players, but I am seriously hating the game. I actually like most of these unskilled authors as people, and to be honest find that I have a lot more in common with them caste-wise than many of the lit fiction crew. But I do wish they would stop looking at sales figures long enough to work on improving their writing and editing. I do wish they would demand quality from themselves, and that others in the industry demanded it from them.

THEM: Yeah, give it to them Street Lit people.
ME: Actually, I wasn't even thinking about them; I was thinking about bad writing in general. I do find it amusing to hear the Chick Lit writers complaining about the Street Lit writers the way everybody used to complain about the Chick Lit writers themselves. I wonder whom the Street Lit people will complain about in five years?

THEM: He's just jealous because he's not filling his pockets.
ME: Oddly enough, I actually do okay financially. I'm far from rich, but for the most part I manage to support myself, my wife and my three great kids off of income from writing and the teaching of writing. I've been very fortunate. I don't believe writers shouldn't be compensated, I just think that writers shouldn't become so obsessed with getting paid that their work suffers as a result.

Thank you for your criticism, I do appreciate it.

Best,

Mat Johnson
www.niggerati.com

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Friday, January 05, 2007

Report Card Time



“Johnson brings a storyteller’s sensibility into play, and he makes excellent use of sources and testimonials.”—Kirkus Reviews
"Johnson (Hunting in Harlem, 2003) brings a critical eye and a lively narrative to retelling a fascinating chapter in American history." —Library Journal

"Fans of historical fiction or readers interested in the impact of slavery on African-American identity today will enjoy Johnson's daring reconstruction."—Publisher's Weekly

The reviews are in for The Great Negro Plot, and they're not too bad. Actually, they're pretty good. I've been fortunate this time, as in the past, that the reviews I've received have been primarily positive. And the ones that have been less generous have always had a positive line or two to at least make my publicist happy.

When my first novel came out, Drop, I waited anxiously for every review, and went into an internal fury every time I felt I received an unjustly negative one. Every once in a while I received negative criticism that I felt was a valid critique of what I had actually done (or failed to do), and that I didn't mind so much. How could I, they were right. It was the ones that were negative and clueless, or sometimes racist, that infuriated me. Still, the vast majority of the criticism I received was positive, and of course most I forgot instantly. It was the negative criticism that stuck with me. Some of those rips I can still quote today, sadly.

Realizing that I ignored all of the positive things critics said about my work and obsessed about the negative things, with my second novel, Hunting in Harlem, I swore to look at none of the reviews, telling my agent, editor, and publicist to not send them to me. Despite this, they couldn't resist telling me when each one was good or bad. And my family and friends would email reviews to me despite my protests. So it was useless.

Now though, the reviews have lost their power over me. Not because I'm a better person, but because I've learned more. I used to think that, like in a writing workshop, my reviews would help me become a better writer, but none ever has and that's not what they are there for. I used to think that reviews were the definitive opinions of experts, but nowadays many are just the rushed judgements of graduate students making $40 a pop . Worst of all, I used to think that a negative review could effectively kill my book. Now I realize that's just silly. Book reviews don't ultimately make or break books. Readers do.

(...and advertising budgets, and publishing sales teams, and invested publishers, and publicists with pull, and chain bookstore buyers, and independent store owners, and award judges, and the New York Times, and Oprah, and Newsweek, and Charlie Rose, and Time, and Terri Gross, and Essence, and you might as well just give up and let it take care of itself.)