
Any Day Now: Toward a Black Aesthetic - Larry Neal
A collection of seminal essays on the arts by Larry Neal, a founder of the Black Arts Movement
Larry Neal, a poet, dramatist, and critic, was a founding figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1960s and 1970s in New York. Writing as the arts editor for Liberator magazine, a radical journal published in Harlem, Neal called for Black artists to produce work that was politically oriented, rooted in the Black experience, and written for the Black community. Engaging with fiction, music, drama, and poetry in his texts, he challenged the dominance of the Western art-historical canon and charged Black artists and writers with reshaping artistic traditions according to their own history. As he proclaimed in his essay âThe Black Writerâs Role,â written in 1966, âBlack writers must listen to the world with their whole selvesââtheir entire bodies. Must make literature move people. Must want to make our people feel, the way our music makes them feel.â
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A collection of seminal essays on the arts by Larry Neal, a founder of the Black Arts Movement
Larry Neal, a poet, dramatist, and critic, was a founding figure of the Black Arts Movement in the 1960s and 1970s in New York. Writing as the arts editor for Liberator magazine, a radical journal published in Harlem, Neal called for Black artists to produce work that was politically oriented, rooted in the Black experience, and written for the Black community. Engaging with fiction, music, drama, and poetry in his texts, he challenged the dominance of the Western art-historical canon and charged Black artists and writers with reshaping artistic traditions according to their own history. As he proclaimed in his essay âThe Black Writerâs Role,â written in 1966, âBlack writers must listen to the world with their whole selvesââtheir entire bodies. Must make literature move people. Must want to make our people feel, the way our music makes them feel.â















