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Amiri Baraka quotes
The artist's role is to raise the consciousness of the people. To make them understand life, the world and themselves more completely. That's how I see it. Otherwise, I don't know why you do it.
Amiri Baraka
A man is either free or he is not. There cannot be any apprenticeship for freedom.
Amiri Baraka
If the flag of an armed enemy of the U.S. is allowed to fly over government buildings, then it implies that slavery, or at least the threat of slavery, is sanctioned by that government and can still legally exist.
Amiri Baraka
Thought is more important than art. To revere art and have no understanding of the process that forces it into existence, is finally not even to understand what art is.
Amiri Baraka
I guess I was the most unbohemian of all bohemians. My bohemianism consisted of not wanting to get involved with the stupid stuff that I thought people wanted you to get involved with - ... namely America...
Amiri Baraka
You cannot stop struggling just because you've got a black guy walking around saying some stuff. Just because his skin is your color don't mean his brain is the same as yours; if you're going to bomb Libya you're nuts. So it's a continual struggle to raise the level of social consciousness in the country. Not only for black people but for everybody who needs that change.
Amiri Baraka
Art in an abstract setting is one thing, but art where you're actually telling people to do things becomes dangerous...
Amiri Baraka
The poor Negro always remembered himself as an ex-slave and used this as the basis of any dealings with the mainstream of American society. The middle class black man bases his whole existence on the hopeless hypothesis that no one is supposed to remember that for almost three hundred years there was slavery in America, that the white man was a master, the black man a slave. This knowledge, however, is at the root of the legitimate black culture of this country. It is this knowledge, with its attendant muses of self-division, self-hatred, stoicism, and finally quixotic optimism, that informs the most meaningful of Afro-American music.
Amiri Baraka
To name something is to wait for it in the place you think it will pass.
Amiri Baraka
I guess I was the most unbohemian of all bohemians. My bohemianism consisted of not wanting to get involved with the stupid stuff that I thought people wanted you to get involved with - ... namely America... Dwight Eisenhower, McCarthyism and all those great things.
Amiri Baraka
God has been replaced, as he has all over the West, with respectability and air conditioning.
Amiri Baraka
One of the most persistent traits of of the Western white man has always been his fanatical and almost instinctive assumption that his systems and ideas about the world are the most desirable, and further that people who do not aspire to to them, or at least think them admirable, are savages or enemies.
Amiri Baraka
You can't be an American without being related to other Americans.
Amiri Baraka