Music
superstar James Brown's influence was widespread. Count me in as
a longtime fan of his. Brown's recent passing marks the end of an
era.
What I wish to add to the many accolades
and tributes to him is just this: his song "Say It Loud, I'm Black and
I'm Proud" during the freedom upsurge of African Americans nearly four
decades ago had an impact that, I think, is being sidestepped. This
says more about commentators than Brown. Allow me to explain.
The lyrics in his 1968 song that I note aptly described the conditions
of black workers. They were laboring for low wages. Their employers'
idea of upward mobility was a cruel hoax in ways big and small.
It was long past time for a positive change, and the black masses were
demanding just that across the U.S. A century after the American civil
war and Reconstruction had passed and most blacks, most of the time,
remained on the bottom. At the same time, there was a kind of
post-Second World War industrial prosperity in the U.S., due mainly to
a lack of competition from the nations (Germany and Japan) defeated in
humanity's biggest blood bath to-date.
Meanwhile, the U.S. empire was toppling democratically elected
governments in Africa, Asia, Latin America and the Middle East. These
military actions were packaged for the U.S. public in the name of
democracy. Stateside, democracy was a dead letter for the black
proletariat.
Here was a contradiction. An old bearded German once said that history
is the resolution of contradictions. Well, "Say It Loud, I'm Black
and I'm Proud" spoke to a lived contradiction of African Americans in
the USA after WW II.
I submit that Brown's song also articulated others' lives of loss,
namely the oppression that U.S. workers of all ages, colors and
backgrounds experience on the job. That is, what they create for
hourly wages is not theirs to keep. They make and the boss takes;
this process creates alienated human beings.
Without question, those working people who are the last hired and the
first fired make more and get less. And in a labor market segmented
by gender and skin color, the oppression of being employed, exploited
and alienated is exceeded by one thing only. I mean the oppression of
being out of work, the condition of surplus labor, when there is no
boss to hire one in the marketplace, the fate of those, overwhelmingly
black, who are behind bars in the U.S. today.
James Brown was spot-on in voicing black people's demand for more
fairness and justice in U.S. employment. He nailed the alienated,
exploited and oppressed lot of wage-labor for African Americans.
Moreover, his freedom lyrics for them had to, and I say did in fact,
appeal to others for whom the workplace by its very structure of
inequality creates un-human conditions. Therefore, I think we
overlook to our loss the revolutionary attraction of Brown's lyrics to
society's mass, the laboring class, employed and unemployed. The
black struggle was/is a race, class and gender struggle for a new
society.
James Brown's genius was to signify a part of that whole for us.
Seth Sandronsky is a member of
Sacramento Area Peace Action and a co-editor of
Because People Matter, Sacramento's progressive paper.
He can be reached at:
bpmnews@nicetechnology.com.