A PARALLEL CALIFORNIA
African-Americans have been in California since at least the late 18th century. In the 1790s they comprised nearly 15 percent of San Francisco’s population and more than 18 percent of Monterey’s. And since arriving in California, black authors have written eloquently about their experiences in letters, memoirs, poetry, and fiction. And yet the variety and expansiveness of this literary history has been long neglected. Redressing that is Black California: A Literary Anthology, the latest volume from the California Legacy Series, a decadelong publishing collaboration of Santa Clara University and Heyday.
Editor Aparajita Nanda, a lecturer in SCU’s English department, writes movingly in her preface about teaching and researching the state’s black literary culture, and her selections in this volume consistently surprise: from mountaineer James Beckwourth’s bittersweet account of his discovery of the northern Sierra pass named for him to Jervey Tervalon’s complicating look at the legacy of Stanley Tookie Williams, who was convicted of four murders but became a changed man (and author of anti-gang violence literature) while on death row in San Quentin.
Selections from David Henderson, Alice Walker, Ishmael Reed, Shaneska Jackson, Paula Woods, and many others demonstrate a remarkable range of literary styles and concerns. If there’s a single recurrent theme here, it is that the experience of racism in its most blatant and its most subtle forms has shaped these writers’ lives and expression. But that is to oversimplify. Because the manner with which these writers tackle prejudice—from comedy to rage—is so textured. And rarely is this the only issue they write about. Love, pleasure, and hope also abound.
The view of California presented here is a parallel one, an instructive counter to “sunny California.” Instead, as editor Nanda writes, Black California compiles “the narrative of black voices that speak of dreams and disasters, of heroic achievements and tragic failures … [and] that beats to the pulse of black California as it animates the printed word.” Alden Mudge