A dazzlingly inventive, deeply moving, intellectually bracing exploration of pain and beauty, private memory and public monument, art and complexity in contemporary Black life.
I wanted to write about silences and terror and acts that hover over generations, over centuries. I began by writing about my mother and grandmother. from Note 18 in Ordinary Notes
A singular achievement, Ordinary Notes explores with immense care profound questions about loss, and the shapes of Black life that emerge in the wake. In a series of 248 brief and urgent notes that gather meaning as we read them, Christina Sharpe skillfully weaves artifacts from the pastpublic ones alongside others that are poignantly personalwith present-day realities and possible futures, intricately constructing an immersive portrait of everyday Black existence. Through the striking images and words in these pages, themes and tones echo: sometimes about life, art, language, beauty, memory; sometimes about history, photography, and literaturebut always attending, with exquisite care, to the ordinary-extraordinary dimensions of Black life.
At the heart of Ordinary Notes is the indelible presence of the authors mother, Ida Wright Sharpe. I learned to see in my mothers house, writes Sharpe. I learned how not to see in my mothers house . . . My mother gifted me a love of beauty, a love of words. Using these and other gifts and ways of seeing, Sharpe steadily summons a chorus of voices and experiences to become present on the page. She articulates and follows an aesthetic of “beauty as a method, collects entries from a community of thinkers towards a Dictionary of Untranslatable Blackness, and rigorously examines sites of memory and memorial.And in the process, she forges a new literary form, as multivalent as the ways of Black being it traces.
Hardcover |392 pages |6.57″ x 9.06″
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