Search
| Mostly Cloudy, 83 F (28 C)
| RSS | |

SECTIONS:

 

Arts · Politics · Crime
· Sports · Food ·
· Opinion · NOLA ·
Lagniappe

 
THE

Defender Picks

 

Lundi

May 20th

Tamami, The Baby’s Curse

Cafe Instanbul (7:00 PM)

A Japanese film about a teenager’s strange venture into a haunted house

 

Blue Grass Pickin' Party

Hi-Ho Lounge (8:00 PM)
Weekly Mon Gig- Circle of voices and guitars cooks up standards. Special appearance by Red Beans and Rice
 

King James & the Special Men
BJ's Lounge (10:00PM)
Weekly Mon Gig- Burgundy in the Bywater for that downtown rhythm and blues.
 

Charmaine Neville Band
Snug Harbor (8:00PM, 10:00PM)
Weekly Mon Gig- The Neville niece brings her soul and her band to Frenchmen
 

New Orleans Jazz Vipers
Spotted Cat (10:00PM)
Weekly Mon Gig- Trad Jazz on Frenchmen

 

Johnny Sketch and the Dirty Notes
Maple Leaf Bar (10:00 PM)
Get sketchy at the bar's new Monday gig 

 

What Maisie Knew

Zeitgeist Multi-Disciplinary Arts Center (7:30PM)

Julianne Moore, Steve Coogan, and Alexander Skargard star in the film, an adaptation of Henry James' novella of the same name

 

Hollygrove’s Party in the Garden

8301 Olive Street (6:00 PM)

Honey Island Swamp Band Trio with Alvin Youngblood Hart will play at the fourth annual celebration of the farmer’s market, with proceeds to go to kid’s farm education programs

 

Mardi

May 21st

Rolling Through

Rosa Keller Library (5:00-9:00 PM)

My House NOLA presents a rolling food vendor mini festival


 

Calle 54 Screening

The Antenna Gallery (7:00 PM)

A series of music-themed movies and documentaries, curated and hosted by DJ Soul Sister, and co-presented by Charitable Film Network, Press Street, and WWOZ

 

Birdfoot Backstage with WWNO 89.9 FM

Jewish Community Center (7:30 PM)

The second evening of a chamber music festival that has something for classical aficionados and dilettantes alike

 

Pure X

Circle Bar (10:00 PM)

Catch the Indie rockers on their North American tour


'What About Us?'

Room 220 Previews The Melanated Writers' Summer Reading Series



Like most things in New Orleans, the men and women of the MelaNated Writers collective aren’t simply just writers—among them you will find musicians, students, journalists, lawyers, professors, activists, and citizens who live and work in a city where some were born but ultimately all have chosen to call home.

 

As one of the group’s original members, Maurice Carlos Ruffin, puts it, “We thrive on the edge of destruction. It forces us to live in the moment. New Orleans is not for everyone, but if you’ve got that twinkle in your eye, New Orleans is home. That twinkle is hope and joie de vivre.”

 

The MelaNated Writers are celebrating their two-year anniversary this July, with A MelaNated Summer in New Orleans, a reading series that kicks off at 7 p.m. on Friday, June 1 at the New Orleans Museum of Art in partnership with the museum’s Where Y’Art? event programming. Ruffin, along with fellow MelaNated writers jewel bush, Gian Smith, and J.R. Ramakrishnan will read from their work, and the venerable Kalamu ya Salaam will preside over the event.

 

As one of the city’s only collectives of writers of color, MelaNated’s members are diverse, and so is their work. It spans genres including fiction, screenwriting, memoir, and poetry.

 

“Any way you think to bring a story to an audience, the group has embraced those artists.” Ruffin says. “Writers of color have a unique perspective. It’s almost a musical thing. There’s the wide world of popular music, but we’re playing variations of jazz, swing, ragtime, and fusion. We’re writing words like other writers, but with syncopation and blue notes.”

 

The collective was founded in 2010 by jewel bush, a communications specialist and former full-time reporter who eventually decided to dedicate herself to prose.

 

“I grew really tired of being assigned stories and not truly writing about the things I necessarily wanted to,” she said. “So having all these ideas and accessing what I saw as a deficit in stories about New Orleans and the South, I decided to pursue fiction writing seriously. That was nearly four years ago.”

 

She was compelled to assemble MelaNated after attending a literary conference in San Francisco founded by Dominican-American writer Junot Diaz. She noticed a similar need for a network of writers of color in New Orleans. Over the past two years, the collective has grown to include 19 writers, among them Louisiana Weekly journalist David T. Baker, former newspaper reporter Mary Webb, and Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial writer Jarvis DeBerry.

 

“I was friends with a few writers and they knew other writers,” bush said, “and before you knew it, in July 2010 I had more than 15 people in my living room discussing literature, sharing resources, and wanting to know when we were going to meet again.”

 

While not all of the members are originally from New Orleans, they each have a vested interest in the local literary community as well as continuing the city’s long tradition of black artists’ collectives. Their inspirations include the Negro Writers Project, a Depression-era unit formed by New Orleans poet Marcus Christian, and BLKARTSOUTH, the Southern extension of the Black Arts Movement. As one of the co-founders of BLKARTSOUTH and NOMMO Literary Society, author Kalamu ya Salam has led the current vanguard of local writers of color and will preside over the collective’s first public reading.

 

The MelaNated Summer reading series will feature three events taking place at different locations throughout the city. “We wanted to have the events at venues across the city to spread the love and at the same time draw attention to MelaNated-owned businesses like Cafe Treme and JuJu Bag,” bush said.  The remaining two installments of the MelaNated Summer reading series will take place at Café Treme on July 14 and Juju Bag on August 2.

 

For Ruffin, the readings have been a long time coming.

 

“There’s so much creative energy in this city. This is just way to focus it. I hope our attendees will come away with a sense that New Orleans really is a special place for the arts, and that we, the Melanated Writers, are ready to surprise, shock, and delight.”

 

bush hopes that the events will both inspire and excite local readers by showcasing the burgeoning talent of the collective’s writers.

 

“I believe this sect of the arts is overlooked here," she said. "What about the great writers who are here? Who honed their literary chops right here in the city, and are in league with Faulkner and Tennessee Williams, Tom Dent and Kalamu ya Salaam? What about them? What about us? We exist and are telling true stories and are speaking our truths. You will not hear these stories anywhere else.”

 

At the heart of the collective is a unifying love for New Orleans and the people who make it such a unique place to live and write. For bush, “New Orleans is a character, not just a destination or scenery. Living in New Orleans is like being in a dysfunctional relationship. You don’t like the crime and brutality of New Orleans but then spring time comes and you’re at the French Quarter Festival looking at the splendor of the Mississippi River and you forget that your house was broken into in the fall and that your laptop with 80 percent of your writings was stolen. And then you feel really good and at peace being in New Orleans.”

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
If you have your own website, enter its address here and we will link to it for you. (please include http://).
eg. http://www.kirkdesigns.co.uk
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
view counter
Erin Rose
view counter
Juan&#039;s Flying Burrito
view counter
view counter
Follow Us on Facebook
view counter
The Country Club
view counter


Contributors:

Dead Huey Long, Emma Boyce, Ian Hoch, Sarah Esenwein, Ryan Sparks, Will Dilella, Chris Rinaldi, Lianna Patch, Phil Yiannopoulos, Cate Czarnecki, Jonas Griffin, Jennifer Abbot, Mary Kilpatrick, Elaina Patton, Mike Horst, Devin Bambrick, Katherine McGuire, Norris Ortolano, Joe Shriner

Staff Writers

Ryan Sparks, Kerem Ozkan

Listings

Elisabeth Morgan

Puzzler

Paolo Roy

Art Director:

Michael Weber, B.A.

Assistant Managing Editor

Mary-Devon Dupuy

Managing Editor

Stephen Babcock

Editor:

B. E. Mintz

Published Daily by

Minced Media, Inc.