---NOVELS---

free online james baldwin stories, essays, videos, and other resources

**edit

James baldwin online archive with his articles and photo archives.

---NOVELS---

Giovanni's room"When David meets the sensual Giovanni in a bohemian bar, he is swept into a passionate love affair. But his girlfriend's return to Paris destroys everything. Unable to admit to the truth, David pretends the liaison never happened - while Giovanni's life descends into tragedy. This book introduces love's fascinating possibilities and extremities."

Go Tell It On The Mountain"(...)Baldwin's first major work, a semi-autobiographical novel that has established itself as an American classic. With lyrical precision, psychological directness, resonating symbolic power, and a rage that is at once unrelenting and compassionate, Baldwin chronicles a fourteen-year-old boy's discovery of the terms of his identity as the stepson of the minister of a storefront Pentecostal church in Harlem one Saturday in March of 1935. Baldwin's rendering of his protagonist's spiritual, sexual, and moral struggle of self-invention opened new possibilities in the American language and in the way Americans understand themselves."

+bonus: film adaptation on youtube. (if you’re a giancarlo esposito fan, you’ll be delighted to see him in an early preacher role)

Another Country and Going to Meet the Man Another country: "James Baldwin's masterly story of desire, hatred and violence opens with the unforgettable character of Rufus Scott, a scavenging Harlem jazz musician adrift in New York. Self-destructive, bad and brilliant, he draws us into a Bohemian underworld pulsing with heat, music and sex, where desperate and dangerous characters betray, love and test each other to the limit." Going to meet the Man: " collection of eight short stories by American writer James Baldwin. The book, dedicated "for Beauford Delaney", covers many topics related to anti-Black racism in American society, as well as African-American–Jewish relations, childhood, the creative process, criminal justice, drug addiction, family relationships, jazz, lynching, sexuality, and white supremacy."

Just Above My Head"Here, in a monumental saga of love and rage, Baldwin goes back to Harlem, to the church of his groundbreaking novel Go Tell It on the Mountain, to the homosexual passion of Giovanni's Room, and to the political fire that enflames his nonfiction work. Here, too, the story of gospel singer Arthur Hall and his family becomes both a journey into another country of the soul and senses--and a living contemporary history of black struggle in this land."

If Beale Street Could Talk"Told through the eyes of Tish, a nineteen-year-old girl, in love with Fonny, a young sculptor who is the father of her child, Baldwin's story mixes the sweet and the sad. Tish and Fonny have pledged to get married, but Fonny is falsely accused of a terrible crime and imprisoned. Their families set out to clear his name, and as they face an uncertain future, the young lovers experience a kaleidoscope of emotions-affection, despair, and hope. In a love story that evokes the blues, where passion and sadness are inevitably intertwined, Baldwin has created two characters so alive and profoundly realized that they are unforgettably ingrained in the American psyche."

also has a film adaptation by moonlight's barry jenkins

Tell Me How Long the Train's been gone At the height of his theatrical career, the actor Leo Proudhammer is nearly felled by a heart attack. As he hovers between life and death, Baldwin shows the choices that have made him enviably famous and terrifyingly vulnerable. For between Leo's childhood on the streets of Harlem and his arrival into the intoxicating world of the theater lies a wilderness of desire and loss, shame and rage. An adored older brother vanishes into prison. There are love affairs with a white woman and a younger black man, each of whom will make irresistible claims on Leo's loyalty. 

---ESSAYS---

Baldwin essay collection. Including most famously: notes of a native son, nobody knows my name, the fire next time, no name in the street, the devil finds work- baldwin on film

--DOCUMENTARIES--

Take this hammer, a tour of san Francisco.

Meeting the man

--DEBATES:--

Debate with Malcolm x, 1963 ( on integration, the nation of islam, and other topics. )

Debate with William Buckley, 1965. ( historic debate in america. )

Heavily moderated debate with Malcolm x, Charles Eric Lincoln, and Samuel Schyle 1961. (Primarily Malcolm X's debate on behalf of the nation of islam, with Baldwin giving occassional inputs.)

----

apart from themes obvious in the book's descriptions, a general heads up for themes of incest and sexual assault throughout his works.

More Posts from Minirosebush and Others

1 year ago

I apologize for calling Macklemore cringe

9 months ago
Japan: Ambassadors of U.S., U.K., France, Italy and Australia will skip the August 8 Nagasaki peace ceremony after the mayor disinvited Israel. https://t.co/WQYwiPnIkE

— 🇵🇸🇯🇵Thoton Akimoto (@AkimotoThn) August 7, 2024
*August 9

— 🇵🇸🇯🇵Thoton Akimoto (@AkimotoThn) August 7, 2024
アメリカやイギリスなど少なくとも6か国の駐日大使、長崎の原爆式典を一斉に欠席へ イスラエル不招待を受け | TBS NEWS DIG
TBS NEWS DIG
長崎市であさって行われる平和祈念式典にアメリカやイギリスなど、少なくとも6か国の駐日大使が欠席する意向を示していることがわかりました。イスラエルが招待されていないことを理由としています。あさって、長…
5 years ago
Cameron Boyce For Schön! Magazine
Cameron Boyce For Schön! Magazine
Cameron Boyce For Schön! Magazine
Cameron Boyce For Schön! Magazine

Cameron Boyce for Schön! Magazine


Tags
10 months ago
Twitter thread by Alec Karakatsanis
(@equalityAlec)
11 Jul 24

THREAD. I didn't fully know what to expect when I started digging into over a decade of records, statements, financial data, and other information about police body cameras. I suspected it to be troubling, but what I found shocked even me.

I also examined hundreds of news articles about police body cameras. The result? The public campaign to sell police body cameras as a liberal "reform" is one of the great frauds of modern domestic U.S. propaganda. It carries profound lessons for anyone who cares about democracy.

First, a fact more people should know is that police leaders and prosecutors desperately *wanted* body cameras for years. They had a problem though: cops couldn't get hundreds of millions of $$$ in funding for them. So how did police finally get them?

After the police killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson ten years ago generated massive public outrage over police violence, police and multi-billion dollar surveillance companies realized they had an opportunity.
They realized that while they'd been unable to get local governments to pay billions for the surveillance bonanza before, now they could partner with "reformers" to pitch body cameras as a *solution* to police violence. Liberal "reformers" were a perfect target/accomplice.

The money started flowing. President Obama called for hundreds of millions in cash from the feds to supplement local and state spending, which liberal leaders and cops championed. The market value of the main companies grew by billions, with exploding yearly sales.
[image of a graph. Title: "Soaring Body Camera Sales" Strap: Sales of body-worn cameras and related products from Avon, the largest manufacturer of tjee equipment.
The x marks the amount of spending while y denotes the years. The graph shows a line beginning from approximately USD 10 million in 2013, curve dramatically upward through the consecutive years until it ends at USD 192 million in 2018.]

Almost every news article published for the following decade omitted something crucial: police and prosecutors wanted the cameras not because it would make them "accountable" and "transparent" but for *exactly the opposite reasons.*
Police and their industry allies used the news media to focus the public on the supposed need to capture police violence on video. They said police lacked funding for tech that could provide the public with “accountability" and "transparency."

In reality, according to their own statements, they sought the greatest expansion of surveillance infrastructure in modern policing history, and dreamed of lucrative contracts to link the new video with AI facial and voice recognition software and predictive policing algorithms.

For example, they wanted an easy tool that cops could deploy at protests to scan the crowd and know who is there and who is associating with who based on facial recognition. They wanted to be able to share this intelligence about protestors in massive profitable databases.

Cops/prosecutors also wanted them because it's the most powerful new form of evidence: outward looking videos that bureaucrats could create, direct, curate, edit, and control both in terms of what's captured, what's left out, and at which political moment it's publicly released.

Body camera videos are now routinely used in almost every prosecutor office in the U.S. as evidence to get mostly poor people to quickly plead guilty to things like drug possession and trespassing. They are almost never used against police officers.
To the contrary, the videos are often given privately to cops prior to their internal statements about controversial incidents in which they used violence to create and standardize initial police narratives with the goal of reducing potential civil and criminal liability.

The benefits of body cameras to the punishment bureaucracy and big corporations unfolded exactly as police chiefs and corporate sales representatives from the companies discussed the devices over a decade ago when formulating their goals *before* Michael Brown’s killing.

Most profoundly, though, body cameras served a propaganda function. They steer public away from *systemic* questions about the role of armed government agents, why they only enforce some crimes against some people, why they are in certain neighborhoods in the first place, etc

With the explosion of cameras, police killed more and more people each year. Exactly as everyone on the inside knew, cameras didn't make police less violent. A little known fact: the federal government's own review of studies shows body cameras *do not make police less violent*!

For example, each year since George Floyd was killed --captured in a useful angle horrifically on video by a bystander not the police body camera--police have killed more people than they did the year before despite huge new sums spent on body cameras.
There are so many fascinating details in this story. You can read my full article here explaining this entire process in detail in the Yale Journal of Law & Liberation: campuspress.yale.edu/yjll/files/202…

UPDATE: I've been tracking hundreds of coordinated far-right replies and quote-tweets. It's interesting for a few reasons.  First, many of them assert ludicrous falsities about basic facts. Second, many fundamentally misunderstand the arguments.  But most important:

The scope and silliness of the right-wing replies all helps make one of the core points: liberals who supported body cameras as "reform" should pay attention to who is defending this lucrative, authoritarian tech and the hateful nonsense they are spewing.
Screenshot of Twitter profile. Name: 
Alec Karakatsanis
Username: @equalityAlec
Bio: founder, @CivRightsCorps civil rights lawyer, author of usual cruelty (2019) and copaganda (forthcoming 2024)
Location: Washington, DC
Link: [civilrightscorps.org]
Joined: February 2014

Link to thread.

Link to article.

Link to author's bio.

Alt text enabled on all images.

5 months ago
James Baldwin, A Transition Interview, 1972

James Baldwin, A Transition Interview, 1972

10 months ago
☆

2 years ago

yo Mr white check out the banquet table. there's pheasant and aspic and roast suckling pig. this place is straight up magical. bitch

1 year ago

April 28, 2024 - An unintentionally funny video by a zionist propagandist shows off some good organisation and discipline at the UCLA encampment for Palestine.

  • desperatelydivinelover
    desperatelydivinelover liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • alma-presa-gentil-core
    alma-presa-gentil-core liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • lookinggoodinplaid
    lookinggoodinplaid liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • zerr-issen
    zerr-issen liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • uhm-weather
    uhm-weather liked this · 2 weeks ago
  • 4yoourinfo
    4yoourinfo reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • spicybrowngirly
    spicybrowngirly reblogged this · 2 weeks ago
  • enbysian
    enbysian liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • binarisunset
    binarisunset liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • sobbing420
    sobbing420 reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • tsnbrainrot
    tsnbrainrot reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • 08195
    08195 liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • elainiisms
    elainiisms liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • referencesaint
    referencesaint reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • bobthebenevolentpirate
    bobthebenevolentpirate liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • postwarglamourgirll
    postwarglamourgirll liked this · 3 weeks ago
  • andistudying
    andistudying reblogged this · 3 weeks ago
  • effzs
    effzs liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • b1tchesbrew2
    b1tchesbrew2 liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • mediocre-manifest
    mediocre-manifest liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • friskenipper
    friskenipper liked this · 4 weeks ago
  • nonamewitch9
    nonamewitch9 liked this · 1 month ago
  • scnd-trifecta
    scnd-trifecta liked this · 1 month ago
  • 52px
    52px liked this · 1 month ago
  • mimi-and-the-next-20th-century
    mimi-and-the-next-20th-century reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • mimi-and-the-next-20th-century
    mimi-and-the-next-20th-century liked this · 1 month ago
  • motionpicturesoundtrack
    motionpicturesoundtrack liked this · 1 month ago
  • umbrellas-on-bridges
    umbrellas-on-bridges liked this · 1 month ago
  • atalantagf
    atalantagf liked this · 1 month ago
  • retro-plasmas
    retro-plasmas liked this · 1 month ago
  • romnianistan
    romnianistan reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • tedchaough
    tedchaough liked this · 1 month ago
  • chocolateinthelibrary
    chocolateinthelibrary reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • chocolateinthelibrary
    chocolateinthelibrary liked this · 1 month ago
  • fromaliminalspace
    fromaliminalspace liked this · 1 month ago
  • brandybottle-fox
    brandybottle-fox liked this · 1 month ago
  • jacktwist2005
    jacktwist2005 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • sisteroutsiderrr
    sisteroutsiderrr liked this · 1 month ago
  • em-the-mushroom
    em-the-mushroom liked this · 1 month ago
  • m-w-c
    m-w-c liked this · 1 month ago
  • theterrorofthedeep
    theterrorofthedeep liked this · 1 month ago
  • clevervamp
    clevervamp reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • bluespring864
    bluespring864 reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • bluespring864
    bluespring864 liked this · 1 month ago
  • simonsaysnothanks
    simonsaysnothanks reblogged this · 1 month ago
  • simonsaysnothanks
    simonsaysnothanks liked this · 1 month ago
  • coolbadplantdad
    coolbadplantdad liked this · 1 month ago
  • orbworb
    orbworb liked this · 1 month ago
  • trifle-observation
    trifle-observation liked this · 1 month ago
  • dicketysplit
    dicketysplit reblogged this · 1 month ago

224 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags