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June
Jordan
1936 - 2002
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Like June…
By Mark Anthony Neal
SeeingBlack.com Music Critic
Talk
about June Jordan! Click here!
"And I got to thinking about the moral meaning
of memory… [A]nd what it means to forget, what it means to fail
to find and preserve the connections with the dead whose lives you,
or I, want or need to honor with our own."
June Jordan
It was a meandering Saturday afternoonbabygirl just finally
down for her all-too-short afternoon napwhen I downloaded
my latest batch of e-mail. Weekend e-mail is usually meaningless,
no notes from editors, or good words from respected colleagues,
or queries from ambitious grad studentsthe stuff that always
gets me excited. It was just the usual banter from various mailing
lists that rarely holds my attention. It was on one of those listservs
that the news of June Jordan's death was forwarded to me.
Diagnosed with breast cancer in 1992, Jordan was given a 40% prognosis
of surviving more than five years but she lived for more than a
decade. While she had been a tireless advocate for the voiceless,
the nameless, the faceless, and the despised for more than 30 years,
she also, with her diagnosis, became an advocate for other women
afflicted with the disease.
The author of 28 books of poetry, fiction, and social criticism,
Jordan was one of the most prolific intellectuals of her generation.
But I am sure there are many, of all races, who perused newspaper
accounts of her death, with no knowledge of who this woman was…
is. In a society that believes that inane dictums embraced by American
youth like "Be Like Mike" or "I Am Tiger Woods" are evidence of
a color-blind, classless, genderless, and discrimination-free America,
June Jordan worked as an activist tirelessly in the very trenches
that Nike, Gatorade, McDonalds, Viacom and two national political
parties claim in the name of commercial products and pop slogans.
We are unlikely to hear any slogans in mainstream media… ever… that
proclaim we should "Be Like June."
To many in the mainstream, the very idea of a Black intellectual
is obscure, so it's not surprising that Jordan's death has received
only nominal (usually 400 words) attention in the mainstream press.
There is, of course, an all-too-long history of the invisibility
of Black death. The Anita Hill v. Clarence Thomas hearings overshadowed
the death of Redd Foxx in 1991. The most genius of American ModernistsMiles
Daviswas only given his due in jazz circles, though he was
the very defintion of American style for more than four decades.
One "witty" commentator even went as far to suggest that the Houghton
family was out-of-line for their grandiose funeral arrangements
for their daughter, pop singer Aaliyah (he was upset that traffic
was backed up). Alluding to the lack of coverage of Miles Davis's
death, bassist Foley, joked on his 1993 track "Better Not Die (N
Amerika Being Black)" that the media would have paid more attention
if it was "Sonny or [expletive] Cher" and of course Sonny Bono's
funeral (he was by then in the US Congress) was covered live on
CNN.
In another example, the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel recently
ran a story about the disappearance of Alexis Patterson, who was
apparently kidnapped a month before Elizabeth Smart's disappearance
in Salt Lake City, but there has been little if any mainstream media
coverage of Patterson's kidnapping. NBC, ABC and others have devoted
more than 30 minutes of coverage to the Utah kidnapping. The intensity
of the coverage of Smart immediately struck me as an effort to divert
attention away from Bush Jr.'s attempt to transform the American
Government via the creation of a Dept. of Homeland Defense. Black
folks were of course diverted by the arrest of an accused child
sex offender and R&B singer, who appears in a widely-circulated
bootlegged copy of child pornography that has probably been seen
by more people than those who have read at least one June Jordan
bookbut I digress.
If June Jordan has been invisible to the mainstream in her death,
it was not simply because she was Black, but because she was a Black
woman, who chose to be an activist and a intellectual, in a society
that seemingly has little value for Black women who aren't taking
off their clothes, while celebrating their "bootilicious" reality
on a video channel, in a movie or in a popular cable "sex" series.
How ironic is it that there is little graphic sex on the HBO's Sex
in the City which has no significant Black female characters,
yet Black women are graphically featured on shows like Real Sex,
the "hooker trilogy" of Hookers on the Point, Pimps Up,
Hoes Down, Hookers at the Point: Five Years Later, and
G-String Divas. Not surprisingly, AOL-Time Warner's HBO,
which specializes in "groundbreaking" documentaries, passed on "NO!"
Aishah Shahidah Simmons's brilliantly brave documentary about Black-on-Black
sexual violence on the basis that it didn't have mainstream appeal.
(Some of those folks who have trafficked in child pornography via
the R. Kelly video, need to spend a few hours with Simmons's film).
June Jordan was committed to exposing herselfher passions,
convictions, and fearsin her words, which she willfully gave
to the world with the libretto I Was Looking at the Ceiling and
Then I Saw the Sky, and books such as Civil Wars, Selected
Essays 1963-1980 (1996), and most recently her memoir, Soldier:
A Poet's Childhood (1999). In her essay "Besting a Worse Case
Scenario" (from Affirmative Action, 1998), Jordan wrote defiantly
about her illness: "I want my story to help to raise red flags,
public temperatures, holy hell, public consciousness, blood pressure,
and moraleactivist/research/victim/morale so that this soft-spoken
emergency becomes the number-one-of-the-tip-of-the-tongue issue
all kinds of people join to eradicate, this afternoon/tonight/Monday
morning." For a decade, Jordan used her own trauma to raise questions
as to why nearly 50,000 woman succumb to breast cancer each year.
Jordan was an avowed feminist, but like Joy James's notion of
Black feminist "Shadow Boxers," Jordan eschewed the "feminism as
simply identity politics" that so-called feminists have been able
to soft-pedal in the New York Times or on the best-sellers
list. Jordan instead sought "analyses of the world-wide absurdity
of endangered female existence" (from the introduction to the forthcoming
collection Some
of Us Did Not Die). She openly challenged women, asking
"when will we revolt against our marginalized, pseudo-maverick status
and assert our majority, our indispensable-to-the-species' powerand
I do mean power: our verifiable ability to change things inside
our own lives and in the lives of other folks, as well."
At the time of her death, an advanced copy of Some
of Us Did Not Die:
New and Selected Essays of June Jordan (scheduled for release
in September of this year) sat in my bag, unread for close to a
month. It was gonna be part of my "summer reading." Jordan of course
couldn't afford simple pleasures like planning her summer reading.
In a poignant moment in "Besting a Worse Case Scenario" Jordan wrote:
I do everything I possibly can every day,
I postpone nothing
I no longer procrastinate.
I give whatever I undertake all that I've got
I pay closer attention to incredible,
surrounding reasons for celebration and faith
I watch for good news.
I become hourly more aware
Of the privileges conveyed by human life…
It has been a privilege for all those who have read Jordan's work
or have known and worked with her, to have shared some part of her
humanity. Jordan was of course right, when she suggested that "some
of us did not die." The essay was written weeks after the 9-11 attacks,
as Jordan struggled with the implications of the attacks and American
response to them. Ultimately, she asserted (borrowing from Auschwitz
survivor Elly Gross) that "We're Still Here/I Guess It Was Our Destiny
To Live/So Let's get on with it!" For those us still in the world,
it would do us well to "Be Like June Jordan."
-- July 12, 2002

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