Black Arts West: Culture and Struggle in Postwar Los Angeles.
Leonard, Kevin Allen
BLACK ARTS WEST: CULTURE AND STRUGGLE IN POSTWAR LOS ANGELES
By Daniel Widener (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2010, 384
pp., $24.95
paper)
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
SEVERAL AUTHORS HAVE EXAMINED the "rise and fall" of
"West Coast jazz" in the 1940s and 1950s, and a number of
scholars have studied black politics in Los Angeles. In this fascinating
and important new book, however, historian Daniel Widener draws
attention to many lesser-known writers, musicians, visual artists, and
filmmakers who constituted the Black Arts Movement in southern
California. Widener argues that these artists and their movement
occupied a central role in the African American freedom struggle. When
African Americans broke down the barriers that had excluded them from
many cultural arenas in the 1950s and 1960s, some artists resisted
integration into white-dominated institutions. Instead, they
concentrated on the production of literary, musical, and visual forms
that would speak primarily to other African Americans and that would
encourage people to participate in the ongoing struggle against racial
oppression.
Three of Widener's chapters focus specifically on different
artistic genres. One examines literature by charting the rise and
decline of the Watts Writers Workshop, which was founded by liberal
Hollywood writer Budd Schulberg following the rioting in 1965. A second
chapter traces the history of the Underground Musicians Association
(also known as the Union of God's Musicians and Artists Ascension,
the Community Cultural Arkestra, and the Pan Afrikan People's
Arkestra), founded in 1961. A third chapter focuses on visual artists
and their work, explaining the history of the Black Artists Alliance
(BAA) and Black Arts Council (BAC), both of which emerged in 1968, and
the Compton Communicative Arts Academy, which emerged in the 1960s and
folded in 1975.
The remaining three chapters further explain and contextualize the
Black Arts Movement. One cogently challenges scholars who have too
readily accepted the distinction between the "cultural
nationalism" of the US Organization and the "revolutionary
nationalism" of the Black Panther Party. Widener notes similarities
between the music and poetry produced by artists associated with both
organizations. He depicts Tom Bradley--Los Angeles's first and so
far only African American mayor--as an "intimate enemy" of
black artists. Bradley's administration, which governed the city
for the twenty years between 1973 and 1993, included African Americans
in the municipal arts program by funding the Watts Towers Art Center,
but funding for the community arts organizations that had nurtured the
Black Arts Movement dried up. Despite this setback, the movement's
radical critique of race and class relations survived in the work of the
"Los Angeles school" of independent black filmmakers. In his
final chapter, Widener analyzes Charles Burnett's Killer of Sheep,
Billy Woodberry's Bless Their Little Hearts, and the Hughes
brothers' Menace II Society, all of which critiqued the social and
economic developments of the Bradley years, when industrial blue-collar
jobs disappeared and unemployment among African Americans rose
dramatically.
Because it thoughtfully and effectively challenges previous
interpretations of the Black Power movement, the Black Arts Movement,
and the social, political, and cultural histories of Los Angeles, this
book must be read by everyone with an interest in any of these topics.
REVIEWED BY KEVIN ALLEN LEONARD, PROFESSOR OF HISTORY, WESTERN
WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY, AND AUTHOR OF THE BATTLE FOR LOS ANGELES: RACIAL
IDEOLOGY AND WORLD WAR II