Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Plug Tuning
Evidently, I made the Oxford English Dictionary this year. Somewhere in my first book Scars… (page 81, according to the OED), I made mention of catching DJ Kayslay spinning at a Zulu Nation anniversary party in the Bronx at the Skate Key. But I used the term “turntablism.” Well, turntablist is now an official word in the English language, joining bling, def, and the rest of all defanged hiphop slang; the OED cites my usage in Scars… as a reference, along with two other authors. It’s enough to make me wanna buy a dictionary.
As well, Bronx Biannual Issue 2 scored a new review. Utne magazine describes NewPages.com as “the best overall Internet portal to the alternative press,” and Rachel King of NewPages had this to say on the latest BxBi:
I’ve recently begun teaching in the inner-city, so I thought I might find reading material for my freshman from the Bronx Biannual: The Journal of Urbane Urban Literature. Although I soon discovered that the explicit content guaranteed that these weren’t stories I’d casually give fourteen-year-old students, this issue contains great reading for the more mature reader.
In the introduction to this second issue, the editor Miles Marshall Lewis says that “the intention with Bronx Biannual is to publish both celebrated and unsung writers on a variety of subjects germane to the black aesthetic.” This volume fulfills that goal, in stories as diverse as Bahiyyih Davis’s about a girl’s obsession on how to best handle her unruly hair, to Staceyann Chin’s poem which observes New Orleans’s decrepit state and begs for blacks to vote, to kelly a. abel’s “Broke-Down Princess,” which tells the story of a pre-teen with a preoccupied mother and jailbird father who is swept into committing sex with multiple older men. This last story creates a powerful, heartbreaking effect by switching perspectives between the mother and her daughter.
These stories are not to be taken with a cup of tea or a grain of salt; many are tales which demand at least an emotional response from the reader. One of my favorite selections is SékouWrites’s “Love, Rage, and Volkswagens” in which he recounts an act of racism done to him by the police. Although the content is pertinent and controversial, it is the form which drew me into this piece. Writes infuses a narrative in between sections of a poem he wrote expressing his frustration at the occurrence: “I’m not the nogoodnigga they mistook me for / I’m not a nigga at all / I’m just…me.” The poem then halts as narration begins: “I was shocked it was even possible for anyone to mistake me for a criminal…I’d had many a philosophic conversation about racism, mostly as an abstract and distant idea.”
Bronx Biannual is an intense journal, ideal for anyone interested in current, urban literature or poetry.



duchess of dork at 1:03 AM on 11/14/07:
i find that most facinating and DOPE! i want to be an OED legend too. is that so much to ask for? seriously though, that is bad ass. props.