Horn of Plenty

The Horn of Plenty

As the page 498 opens I can hear the bluesy voice of Odetta emerging out of Harlem and reaching all the way to the Statue of Liberty. I can see the dancers dancing in the clubs to the music of Dizzy, Bojangles, Duke, Eric Dolphy and Billy Strayhorn. By the end of the page, I know that we are in Harlem during the years between the late thirties and the early fifties. I know also that the pulse of America beats to the rhythm of Jazz and that Jazz is born out of African American culture. It is also obvious with the mention of certain names, that some of the nations top athletes are Black. Yet, because of the appearance of the Global Trotters, I can tell that while Americans are willing and eager to consume the creative fruits of African American toil, they still are not ready to share economic or social equality.

Pg. 498: Odetta is a black female singer of Ballad and Blues; Bedloes Island is where the Statue of Liberty stands; Bojangles is a Jazz entertainer who died in New York 1949; Duke, Dizzy and Eric Dolphy are Jazz entertainers; Billy Strayhorn was a jazz entertainer who moved to Harlem in 1939; the Global trotters are a Harlem basketball team who were denied acknowledgement by the NBL in 1937 because they were black; Sugar Ray was a top-notch prize fighter who won fighter of the year in 1942 and again in 1951.

As I read on to page 499, I am introduced to another side of African American life. I move with the narrator from Harlem into the suburbs to realize the American dream. Here, I feel that I have finally reached the summit and have achieved material success in spite of the odds. Yet, as a black person in a white community, I am not accepted fully. I am asked, yet while standing ´´on my patio, where did I get my money?¨ How is it, they wonder, how a black person could achieve the same success, when all they have done is throw obstacles in my path.

On page 500, a dialogue begins between the narrator and the white suburbanites. They are familiar with the names of other famous African Americans. For example, Charlie Migans, and Richard Wright. Yet, they seem clueless to the racial reasons behind Wrights expatriotism. The dialogue seems to say that the white populous of the suburbs are ignorant to the problems that the black narrator has faced. Is this ignorance genuine or a product of connivance and embarrassment ? As page 500 continues, the narrator speaks of living in the suburbs as ´living in the shadow of the negroes´´. This must be a reference to the conclusion of the complete work, when Hughes speaks about the marginalization that the African Americans feel, and he questions what will happen to an America that lacks such a central understanding of itself. By this, I take him to mean that African Americans form such a large part of American culture and that the power populace of America refuses to acknowledge the significant contribution. In so much, the black culture lives in the ´´shadows´´ around the events that transpire in the United States. So, to speak about living in the suburbs as ¨living in the shadows of the negroes,´ I take him to mean, the Americans who lives in the shadow of its true roots.

Pg. 500: Charlie Migans was a Jazz composer who lived in New York during the 1950s and played with the likes of Charlie Parker; Richard Wright was a black poet and alsow a member of the Communist party. He moved to New York in 1937, but encountered too much racism, so he moved to Paris where he stayed until his death in 1947. His works include The Native Sun and Uncle Tom’s Children.

On page 502, we see a further complication which involves the efforts toward a better life and the inevitable assimilation of blacks into the overwhelmingly white consumer structure. Not everyone can afford the style of life that they are seeking, yet it is the dream of a more peaceful and bountiful life that drives them into debt, that it to say into a new form of slavery. This new world, filled with shiny consumer goods and lots of greenery is also filled with white Christian, conservative doctrine (sermon on the mount and George Sokolsky). Yet, the narrator has not lost the memory of his roots. This is obvious in the last line, when he is asked for a reference for a maid. The last line, ´´Your mamma´´ sends us, the reader tumbling from the borrowed heights of suburban commerce and lands us back in the Jazzy blue haze of Harlem.

Pg. 502: The sermon on the mount is written in the book of Matthew in the bible and is said to be a sermon given by Jesus as a divine presentation of Christian Discipleship; George Sokolsky was a conservative columnist during the McCarthy era.

4 comments:

Dawn Sueoka said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Dawn Sueoka said...

“HORN OF PLENTY”: a reference to the cornucopia, a symbol of abundance. Also a pun on horn, perhaps alluding to jazz musicians’ wealth.

Page 498, line 4
“BEDLOE’S ISLAND”: previous name for Liberty Island, the island the Satue of Liberty is on.

Page 498, line 4
“MANAGED BY SOL HUROK”: He was a manager whose clients included Isadora Duncan, Mstislav Rostropovich, ArthurRubinstein, Isaac Stern, Anna Pavlova, and the African-American contralto Marian Anderson. He is credited with bringing the Bolshoi Ballet to the U.S. In 1939, he arranged an Easter Sunday concert for Marian Anderson. It was supposed to be in Constitution Hall, but the Daughters of the American Revolution protested. With the help of Eleanor Roosevelt and the NAACP, Hurok arranged for Anderson to sing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sol_Hurok
http://www.savethemall.org/moments/anderson.html

page 498, line 17
“JACKIE WILLIE CAMPANELLA”: Jackie Robinson, Willie Mays, Roy Campanella. The first African-American baseball players. Robinson and Campanella were Dogers; Mays played for the Gnats, I mean Giants.

Page 499, line 12
“EVEN FARTHER THAN ST. ALBAN’S”: St. Alban’s is a neighborhood in Queens whose famous residents included Count Basie, W. E. B. DuBois, Roy Campanella, John Coltrane, Ella Fitzgerald, Lena Horne, Jackie Robinson, Fats Waller, and Lester Young. It was fancy, upscale, especially where the jazz musicians lived, in Addisleigh Park.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Albans,_Queens
http://queens.about.com/od/neighborhoods/p/st_albans.htm

Page 500, line 14
“WESTPORT AND NEW CANAAN”: Two towns in Connecticut, among the most affluent in the nation, and both primarily white. Many New Yorkers had summer homes—and year-round homes—there. New Caanan, especially, is noted for it’s mid-century architecture.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westport,_Connecticut
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Canaan,_Connecticut

Page 501, line 9
“IN GEORGE SOKOLSKY’S COLUMN”: Sokolsky was a radio broadcaster and newspaper columnist who supported Senator McCarthy. He made decisions about whether to clear or condemn people blacklisted by Hollywood. The next line, “BIRDS THAT REALLY SING” could be a reference to people “ratting out” their colleagues to the House UnAmerican Activities Committee.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_Ten#The_Hollywood_Ten_and_other_1947_blacklistees
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Sokolsky

Anonymous said...

Dr. Ron McCurdy, Professor of Music at the University of Southern California wrote that "Jazz was a cosmopolitan metaphor for Langston Hughes, a force for cultural convergence beyond the reach of words, or the limits of any one language. It called up visual analogues for him as well, most pointedly the surrealistic techniques of painterly collage and of the film editing developed in this country in the 1930s and 40s, which condensed time and space, conveyed to the viewer a great array of information in short compass, and which offered the possibility of suggesting expanded states of consciousness, chaotic remembrances of past events or dreams -- through montage.'To me,' Hughes wrote, 'jazz is a montage of a dream deferred. A great big dream -- yet to come -- and always yet to become ultimately and finally true.'"

But what is the poem about? Why pair it with jazz?

According to McCurdy, "'Ask Your Mama' was dedicated to Louis Armstrong, "the greatest horn blower of them all," and to those of whatever hue or culture of origin who welcomed being immersed in the mysteries, rituals, names, and nuances of black life not just in America but in the Caribbean, in Latin America, in Europe and Africa during the years of anti-colonial upheaval abroad and the rising Freedom Movement here at home. Not only the youthful Martin Luther King, Jr. but the independence leaders of Guinea and Nigeria and Ghana and Kenya and the Congo fill the chants and refrains of Hughes's epic poem."

One such example of the the jazz influence is seen in the song "When the Saints Go Marching In." After Hughes' line on page 481 "Hand me my mint julep, mammy./ Make haste!", the right-hand side cues the song.

"When the Saints Go Marching In", is an American gospel hymn, combining certain aspects of folk music. Originally, it was a spiritual,often played as a funeral march. Marchers would play it as a sad, slow march, but would increase the song to an upbeat, "Dixieland" style. The song is closely linked to New Orleans, where jazz funerals were common.

http://www.ronmccurdy.com/about_hudges_project.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/When_the_Saints_Go_Marching_In

Anonymous said...

Page 499, line 29
30 cents in 2010 would cost, $2.16.
(http://www.westegg.com/inflation/)

Page 500, line 77
A 1961 $40,000 house would cost $288,240.47 in 2010.
http://www.westegg.com/inflation/