Black to the Future
Notes from Ferguson is the Future Conference at
Princeton University Sept. 11-14, 2015
We are all time travelers.The past hasn’t gone anywhere.
America is a haunted house.The future is in every gesture we
make.
Science fiction is about figuring
out how to be different together.
Ferguson is the Future is/was/will be an
on-going moment of magic, community, and brilliance organized by Moya Bailey,
Ruha Benjamin, and Ayana Jamieson. These women have serious superpowers. They
gathered writers, activists, scholars, musicians, DJs, filmmakers, scientists, and
curious folk at Princeton University to activate our blackness, our
multi-dimensional, time-traveling blackness. Moya, Ruha, and Ayana called us to
celebrate Octavia Butler and the joy of our sci-fi, speculative existence. They
also insisted we look for that way out of no way that allows us to survive on-going
apocalypse. Moya, Ruha, and Ayana raised money, fed and housed us, and kept us
on point as we talked to and with each other. We did not have to provide the
context for our being, for our sensibility—it shimmered around us. Everyone
agreed—it was a blast, a blessing, a revelation to be activists, artists, and
scholars imagining the future we want. Nothing like dreaming and scheming for justice,
pleasure, peace, and sustainable abundance.
Before the public
conference, writers and activists Steven Barnes, Lisa Bolekaja, Adrienne Maree
Brown, Tananarive Due, Nalo Hopkinson, Walidah Imarisha, Nnedi Okorafor, Daniel
José Older, Rasheedah Phillips, Sophia Samatar, Nisi Shawl, and me (Andrea
Hairston) gathered for an activist/artist retreat. We were joined by DJ Lynnée Denise, mixed media artist Soraya
Jean-Louis McElroy, and musicians Be Steadwell and Taja Lindley & Jessica
Valoris of Colored Girls Hustle . (I call out
names, because dear reader, you should go look these folks up. Check out their
art and brilliance. Buy what they make.)
Our retreat mission
was to:
shake each other up
dream freely
explore craft
refuse the way it is as the way it
has to be
skip racism and sexism 101
dance to the music
raise critical questions pertaining
to afro-futurism
conjure solutions
support and challenge one another
spark new projects and
possibilities
explore the impossible
We did all that
and more in gatherings facilitated by Adrienne Maree Brown, and also in casual
encounters sipping port and brandy in the library of Princeton’s guest house or walking down the avenue.
I rarely write
blogs, but Timmi asked me. Writing fast (and doing all that I do) is difficult
to impossible. I’m dyslexic. I actually don’t have time to write this blog, but
that’s why I am writing it. Fast
and furious Andrea, was made possible by Black to the Future Conference magic. Time
travelers have all the time in the Universe!
At our retreat sessions
we discussed how some people are waiting for us to fail. Some people are eager
to laugh at our writing. In Facebook-land and the Twitterverse there is bullying
of “social justice warriors,” of POC and women writers. But we created a manifesto,
a declaration of our freedom as artists. We don’t have to be perfect
or silent, a million times better or silent, bullet proof or silent. We will live out loud and on line while
being black, brown, disabled, queer… We will collaborate for each other’s
success. We are poised to boost the signal on everybody’s work. We will be
vulnerable and not always know what the hell we are doing. We won’t be realistic,
we will try for the impossible.
On Monday, we
were joined by scholars, Reynaldo Anderson, Netrice Gaskins, John Jennings, Alondra
Nelson, Dorothy Roberts, activists and educators from Ferguson, Johnetta Elzie,
Deray McKesson, Brittany Packnett, curators and filmmakers, Erin Christovale,
M. Asli Dukan, Amir George, Dennis Leroy Kangalee, for an all-day speculative
fiction jam. The weave of voices and disciplines, the polyrhythm of
perspectives was astounding. Every day we got smarter, got activated. And
Monday, nobody wanted to leave!
With
organizers Moya, Ruha, and Ayana, we created our visionary future, an
alternative world in the haunted halls of Princeton University. The time
together was heady and full-bodied. We carry new superpowers with us now. Change
is upon us.
1 comment:
Don't forget that Nnedi was with us also on that first day. Truly a remarkable convergence.
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