Project HBW Blog

And the Beat Goes On….New Direction on the HBW Blog


Kenton Rambsy (HBW Staff Member)

"A text graphic saying 'and the beat goes on'"On February 22, 2011, I founded the HBW blog in the attempt
to fill a void—that void being a no central online resource dedicated to
writing about African American novels and its history. Two years later, with
nearly 300 entries and over 200,000 hits, the blog has grown and serves as an
online representation of the Project on the History of Black Writing (HBW). The
initial blogging project to provide a few entries on 100 of the Project’s
novels has certainly surpassed my imagination for what could be possible in terms
of presenting research findings to an online audience.

The growth and sustainability of the blog requires new
voices and ideas in order for the site to continue to meet its goals of being
an outpost for African American novel history. Therefore, as my graduate career
begins to pivot in other directions, I must step down as editor-in-chief in
order to devote my attention to other areas and ensure the future of this
website. While I will still occasionally blog, the day-to-day responsibilities of
the site will now be headed by Goyland Williams as he expands the focus of the
blog and continues to cultivate an online community interested in exploring
content related to black novels, black popular culture, and digital humanities.

 

The HBW blog has served as an online outpost where I could
focus on advancing the Project’s goal of literary recovery work in black studies;
professional development, curriculum change and innovation; and, public
literacy programming. As editor, I have had the opportunity to write nearly 100
entries, recruit a regular blogging staff dedicated to writing about black
novels and culture, cultivate an impressive roster of guest bloggers, and
develop a series of online timelines and various resources geared towards the
study of African American literature. Below, I have catalogued a series of
entries I have done over the past two years and arranged the various blogs by
content and theme.

As the song says, “And, the beat goes on” as the HBW blog continues
to work on filling a major void and serving as an online reservoir for  content pertaining to black artistic culture
in novels, music, and digital culture. 

 

Blogging About African American Literature—Various Topics related to Black Novels and Autobiographies 

100 Novels: Trend Analyses Project—February 22, 2011

The Great Migration—March 1, 2011

Men and Migration—Revisited—March 15, 2011

Black Men, Education, and Political Activism—March 29, 2011

Literary Traditions: Education and Political Activism—April 5, 2011

Black Men and Informal Educational Networks—April 12, 2011

Education and Revolution: Reading the novels of Sutton E.Griggs and Toni Morrison—April 19, 2011

How Richard Wright’s Mother and Grandmother Taught him to Revere the Imaginative—May 3, 2011

Richard Wright’s Formal and Informal Networks—May 10, 2011

Struggles for Freedom: Kanye West and Toni Morrison’s Artistic Renderings of Flight—August 29, 2011

The Race for Theory: Black Women’s Literary Contributions—September 12, 2011

Musical Influences on Black Writing— October 24, 2011

100 Novels Project Revisited—November 7, 2011

Occupy Wall Street and Ralph Ellison: African American Novels and Organized Resistance—November 8, 2011

Protest and Organized Resistance in 5 Black Novels—November 9, 2011

The Function of Voice: Narrating in the Third Person—November 13, 2012

30 Days of 100 Novels

30 Days of 100 Novels—January 23, 2012

Various Entries on Black Literature and Rap Genius

Rap Genius and Black Literature—March 25, 2013

7 Ways that Rap Genius Assists Digital African American Literary Scholarship—April 2, 2013

Follow Up: 7 Links That Demonstrate Rap Genius’s Connection To Digital African American Literary Scholarship—April 3, 2013

Jay-Z, Zora Neale Hurston, and Rap Genius: African American Expressive Culture and “Swag”—April 15, 2013

What Literary Scholars Can Learn from Rap Genius—October 16,2012

Digital Humanities

Mixtapes, Digital Humanities, and Black Studies—October 17,2012

Black Studies and Digital Humanities: A Growing List of Online Resources—October 18, 2012

Text Mining: Two Short Stories By Zora Neale Hurston and Richard Wright—November 12, 2012

Access Stunts Digital Studies in Black Literature—October 15, 2012

Digital Humanities: Blogging About Black Culture—September 26, 2011

Digital Perspective—March 28, 2011

African American Literary History—Timelines and Resources

The Evolution of Novel Covers—December 1, 2011

The Growing Importance of Authors Awarded Fellowships—December 2, 2011

49 African American Novels on Wikipedia—December 5, 2011

The Growing Importance of Formal Education—December 6, 2011

The Prominence of NYC, Chicago, and California—December 7,2011

The Significance of Novel Time Period—December 8, 2011

Literary Vantage Points: Multiple Perspectives of James Baldwin—May 2, 2011

Literary Vantage Points: Multiple Perspectives of Zora Neale Hurston—May 9, 2011

Literary Vantage Points: Multiple Perspectives of Richard Wright—May 16, 2011

Literary Vantage Points: Kevin Reeves Book Launch and Interview—June 13, 2011

Timeline Series—African American Novel History—May 21, 2012

95 Dates of Importance in African American Novel History—May 29, 2012

Black Literary Images (1)—March 18, 2013

Black Literary Images (2)—April 22, 2013

Oprah Winfrey and African American Literature

Oprah Winfrey and Black Literature—March 8, 2011

Timeline: Oprah Winfrey and African-American Literature—May 29, 2012

Oprah Winfrey: A Sponsor of African American Novelists—May 29, 2012

Oprah’s Book Club and Toni Morrison—May 30, 2012

Oprah Winfrey and The Color Purple—May 31, 2012

Oprah Winfrey–A Sponsor of Black Artistic Culture—June 20,2012

 

The Coverage Of…Various Subjects in Black Culture and
Literature

The Coverage of… Manning Marable and Malcolm X—April 19,2011

The Coverage Of…The Passing of Gil Scott-Heron—June 6,2011

The Coverage Of…GIl Scott Heron’s Video Interviews—June 7,2011

The Coverage Of…The “Live” Performances of Gil Scott-Heron— June 8, 2011

The Coverage of… Tupac Shakur and the Celebration of his Birthday—June 16, 2011

The Poetry of Tupac Shakur—June 16, 2011

The Coverage Of…Daniel Rasmussen’s—American Uprising—September 6, 2011

Nikky Finney: 2011 National Book Award for Poetry Recipient—November 21, 2011

The Coverage of…Nikky Finney—National Book Award for Poetry—November 22, 2011

The Coverage Of… The Radical Martin Luther King—January 16, 2012

Break It Down—Explaining Black Novels

Break It Down: Song of Solomon—June 4, 2012

Break It Down: Invisible Man—June 5, 2012

Break It Down: Go Tell It on the Mountain—June 6, 2012

Break It Down: Apex Hides the Hurt—June 7, 2012

Public Events with HBW and the University of Kansas

Allow Me To Re-Introduce Myself—April 18, 2011

The KU Organizer—Professor Tony Bolden—January 19, 2012

Make It Funky III—Professor Adam Bradley—January 19, 2012

The Black Arts Enterprise—Professor Howard Rambsy—January 19, 2012

Nikky Finney: The Role of the Writer and Critic—September 12, 2012

Tags: lists

And the Beat Goes On….New Direction on the HBW Blog