Black in blues How a color tells the story of my people

Imani Perry, 1972-

Book - 2025

"A surprising and beautiful meditation on the color blue - and its fascinating role in Black history and culture - from National Book Award winner Imani Perry"--

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Location Call Number   Status
Bookmobile Nonfiction 305.896/Perry Due Feb 24, 2025
2nd Floor New Shelf 305.896/Perry (NEW SHELF) Due Feb 19, 2025
2nd Floor New Shelf 305.896/Perry (NEW SHELF) Due Feb 25, 2025
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Ecco, an imprint of HarperCollinsPulishers [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Imani Perry, 1972- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
243 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : color illustrations ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780062977397
  • Our blue interior
  • Writing in color
  • Blue goes down
  • The land where the blues began
  • True blue
  • Antigua, South Carolina, Montserrat
  • Saint-Domingue and Haiti
  • A sign which will not be cut off
  • Jaybirds sing
  • Blue gums and blue-black
  • Hoodoo blue
  • The blue note
  • Blue pots
  • Lonely blue
  • Blue-eyed negroes
  • Blue-back speller
  • Egyptian blue in America
  • Blue flag, gold star
  • The blues
  • Eating the other
  • Janie's blues
  • Bentonia
  • Blueprints
  • Citizens
  • Montgomery, Newport, Cape Verde, Accra
  • Afro blue
  • The boys in blue
  • Overall movement
  • Holy repetition
  • Black saint
  • Old blue eyes, new blacks
  • Heaven's there for those...
  • From Indigo child to Whitney's blues
  • Seeing the seventh son
  • God's will undone, the creek did rise.
Review by Booklist Review

National Book Award--winner Perry (South to America, 2022) offers an impressionistic cultural history of the African diaspora through its connections to the color blue, from the Congo to Haiti, Jamaica, and the American South, in music, dance, folklore, art, and literature. As enslaved Black people in the U.S. fought to affirm their humanity, the color blue was key: "Blue porches, planted blue flowers, written blue scriptures, blue attire, trees festooned with blue bottles: these became the cultivated habits and rituals of people denied civil society and legal recognition." In Black bodies, blue evoked "two distinct forms of power," for "the least degraded among Black people were the ones who had the bluest veins beneath the palest skin," while a "blue-gummed woman . . . held the power of conjure and deep ways of knowing." Enslaved Blacks were freed by the Union "boys in blue," yet those uniforms would morph into the blue of "'Blue Lives Matter," the police clapback to "Black Lives Matter." Perry suggests an implied choice "between Black life and police survival . . . And that is a blues song indeed." Packed with cultural references to Nina Simone, Zora Neale Hurston, Miles Davis, and Picasso's African-inspired Blue Period, this is a fascinating and creative work of popular anthropology.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: With each trailblazing book, Perry extends her readership, and this original and affecting improvisation has tremendous appeal.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

National Book Award winner Perry (South to America) offers a lyrical meditation on "the mystery of blue and its alchemy in the lives of Black folk." Her account reaches back "before Black was a race" to the indigo trade. Early modern Europeans were fascinated by (and covetous of) the blue dye that "doesn't just compel the eye" but "attacks multiple senses" with its aromatic scent and strong texture, Perry writes, while for many Africans "indigo had a spiritual significance" and was employed to induce "balance and harmony." With the coming of the slave trade, "a block of indigo dye could be traded for a 'hand,' " or human being--a convergence of sacred and profane that Perry uses as a launch point for her ruminations on Blackness and modernity. She points out that even as Black human beings began to be traded for the dye and forced into its cultivation in the Americas, Europeans' medieval description for Africans as "Blew," or blue, fell out of use, as if to erase the connection between Black people and value. Meanwhile, enslaved Africans in the Americas continued to rely on blue's spiritual strength--Perry cites examples such as the folk practice of hanging "cobalt blue" bottles from myrtle trees and the ritual use of bluestone, or copper sulphate, in hoodoo rituals. In direct and intimate prose, Perry synthesizes an impressive range of research into a sinewy, pulsing narrative that positions the past as an active, living force in the present. Readers will be swept up. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The power of a color. National Book Award winner Perry offers surprising revelations about the connection between the color blue and Black identity as she explores myth and literature, art and music, folklore and film. "Blues are our sensibility," she writes. She begins her wide-ranging history with the production of indigo in the 16th century. Coveted throughout Africa, Asia, and Europe, the dye was so valuable that a block of indigo could be traded for an enslaved person. Imported from West Africa to America, the planting and processing of indigo became tasks for the enslaved. Although the work was arduous, the color, Perry notes, "remained a source of pleasure," and enslaved people used the dye for their own walls, doors, porches, and clothing. The color also became associated with mourning, with blue periwinkles marking the graves of the enslaved and cobalt blue bottles hung from myrtle trees to mark people's passing. The melancholy sound of "a blued note" infused Black music with a quality "so distinctive that someone who knows nothing about music, formally speaking, can hear it is special." Miles Davis' albumsBlue Period andKind of Blue, Nina Simone'sLittle Girl Blue, Roberta Flack'sBlue Lights in the Basement, Duke Ellington's composition "Crescendo in Blue," and Mongo Santamaría's song "Afro Blue" are among many of Perry's musical references. Literary references abound as well: Amiri Baraka'sBlues People, Toni Morrison'sThe Bluest Eye, and Ntozake Shange's novelSassafras, Cypress and Indigo. The "precocious girl-child Indigo," Perry writes, "was me." If blue has signaled Black agency--Haitian rebels wore blue uniforms--it also conveys oppression: "The blue uniform is a metonym for the enforcement arm of the state," Perry notes, and has become shorthand for police power. An innovative cultural history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.