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'I Grew a Sense of Wonder': The Root Presents: It's Lit! Mines the Miracle of A Little Devil in America With Hanif Abdurraqib

The author's latest book celebrates the rich and nuanced history of Black performance in America.

After several books of poetry and essays and a New York Times bestselling meditation on A Tribe Called Quest, acclaimed author and cultural critic Hanif Abdurraqib was halfway through his fifth offeringโ€”an exploration and critique of the history and dynamics of Black performance in Americaโ€”when he suddenly โ€œshifted the spirit of the book.โ€

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โ€œAt first...my thought was that I was going to write a book about appropriation and minstrelsy, and the ways that Black performance has been uprooted from Black performers and repurposed through the white gaze and white lenses and profited off of,โ€ he shares on this weekโ€™s episode of The Root Presents: Itโ€™s Lit! โ€œBut then I was like, that wasnโ€™t that fun of a book to write, because in order to follow that line of inquiry, I realized that I had to center whiteness even if I didnโ€™t want toโ€”or I had to offer too much space to whiteness, even if it wasnโ€™t centering. And I had to offer, like, more space to it that I was actually interested in. And I was kind of, you know, in my head, I was like, โ€˜this isnโ€™t really fun,โ€™ you know...itโ€™s more upsetting than anything. And around that time, I was thinking a lot about Ms. Toni Morrison, who talked so much about removing whiteness from the imagination and then seeing how much room we have.โ€

That revelation happened coincide with the arrival of a gift; a hard drive containing almost every Soul Train episode from 1971 to 1989. Revisiting the groundbreaking and deeply inspiring Black entertainment series, the equally inspiring A Little Devil in America: Notes in Praise of Black Performance was born.

Image: Penguin Random House

โ€œI think through watching and through witnessing some of these things, I grew a sense of wonder and awe with the generosity of black evolution; in the way that black folks are not monolithic in that evolution,โ€ Abdurraqib explained. โ€œI could have watched all those Soul Train episodes with the sound off and still have gotten a feel for how Black fashion, Black hair, Black politics, Black performance evolved in those years, you knowโ€”and that was just like an 18-year window. And so that that was so much of the research, was just being in awe of performances and then running to the page to share what Iโ€™d witnessed,โ€ he continued, adding: โ€œI donโ€™t know if I can ever write a book like this again, because so few other books I think that Iโ€™m interested in would call for me to really just steep myself in miracles and then run to the mountaintop and shout about the miracles.โ€

You can hear more about the miraculous work of Hanif Abdurraqib in Episode 38 of The Root Presents: Itโ€™s Lit!:Hanif Abdurraqib Illuminates the History of Black Entertainment with โ€˜A Little Devil in Americaโ€™, available on Apple, Spotify, Stitcher, iHeart Radio, Google Podcasts, Amazon, NPR One, TuneIn, and Radio Public. A transcript is also available for this episode.

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