I'm still not ready to properly produce
a remembrance of Nikki Giovanni. We lost her on December 9, and I've been thinking of her and ways to, I don't know, really show how much she's meant to me and the work I do.
In the meantime, I was reading various
tributes to Giovanni, including one that writer C. Liegh McInnis
produced and shared on his newsletter. He opened noting that he discovered Black Arts era writing "around the age of eleven or twelve, reading my pop’s copies of
Negro Digest and
Black World." Following leads from there is where he eventually discovered Giovanni.
It's interesting to consider that during the 1980s, McInnis began thinking about the blend of arts and activism developed and displayed by Giovanni, Amiri Baraka, Haki Madhubuti and others during the 1960s and 1970s. By the 1990s when I was living in Mississippi, McInnis was demonstrating modes of that arts & activism in his work and projects.
So we're talking about passing on approaches to arts activism from Giovanni and Baraka to McInnis and others. That transference was facilitated by "copies of Negro Digest and Black World," books, poetry readings, word-of-mouth, newsletters, and so forth.
There's more to say on all of this, but for now, I just wanted to take note.
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