African Voices Summer 2016 (Digital) | Page 10

The Subversive Potential of Black Joy: Reimagining Protest In the Work of James Baldwin and Lorraine Hansberry by Sarita Cannon, Ph.D. In “Sweet Lorraine,” James Baldwin recalls time spent with his dear friend Lorraine Hansberry: “I would often stagger down her stairs as the sun came up, usually in the middle of a paragraph and always in the middle of a laugh. That marvelous laugh. That marvelous face. I loved her, she was my sister and my comrade” (Baldwin xi-xii). In this moving eulogy to the brilliant black playwright who died at age 34 in 1965, Baldwin captures their shared commitment to bearing witness to the injustices of their time as well as their delight in each other and the world around them. For these two writers, protest and pleasure were not mutually exclusive. In this piece, I examine Baldwin’s 1963 jeremiad The Fire Next Time alongside Hansberry’s award-winning 1959 drama A Raisin in the Sun, paying close attention to the ways in which protest manifests not simply as a critique of systematic racial oppression, but also as an expression of love for self and community. Both writers demonstrate the ways in which black pleasure is a necessary and surprisingly subversive element of the revolutionary spirit. Protest lies at the heart of African-American literature. As Black people in the United States have long expressed their experiences of living in a country that depended on their labor for its very existence but refused to acknowledge their humanity, creativity, and agency, critics too often view Black literature as solely political. As Toni Morrison puts it: “The discussion of black literature in critical terms is unfailingly sociology and almost never art criticism” (cited in Conner ix). Certainly, there are works of propaganda that masquerade as art; but I would argue that for many Black writers, the social and the aesthetic can never be separated. Toni Morrison’s statement about her own work, that “a novel has to be 10 african Voices Ruby Dee and Sidney Poitier in A Raisin in the Sun. socially responsible as well as very beautiful,” resonates with my reading of James Baldwin and Lorr