Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Words for My Comrades
Words for My Comrades: A Political History of Tupac Shakur | Dean Van Nguyen
5 posts | 2 read | 3 to read
From Pitchfork and Guardian contributor Dean Van Nguyen comes a revelatory history of Tupac beyond his musical legend, as a radical son of the Black Panther Party whose political legacy still resonates today. Before his murder at age twenty-five, Tupac Shakur rose to staggering artistic heights as the preeminent storyteller of the 1990s, building, in the process, one of the most iconic public personas of the last half century. He recorded no fewer than ten platinum albums, starred in major films, and became an activist and political hero known the world over. In this cultural history, journalist Van Nguyen reckons with Tupacs coming of age, fame, and cultural capital, and how the political machinations that shaped him as a boy have since buoyed his legacy as a revolutionary following the George Floyd uprisings. Words for My Comrades engagescruciallywith the influence of Tupacs mother, Afeni, whose role in the Black Panther Party and dedication to dismantling American imperialism and combating police brutality informed Tupacs art. Tupacs childhood as a son of the Panthers, coupled with the influence of his stepfathers Marxist beliefs, informed his own riveting code of ethics that helped audiences grapple with Americas inherent injustices. Using oral histories from conversations with the people who directly witnessed Tupacs life and career, many of whom were interviewed for the first time herefrom Panther elder Aaron Dixon, to music video director Stephen Ashley Blake, to friends and contemporaries of Tupacs motherVan Nguyen demonstrates how Tupac became one of the most enduring musical legends in hip-hop history, and how intimately his name is threaded with the legacy of Black Panther politics. Van Nguyen reveals how Tupac and Afeni each championed the disenfranchised in distinct ways, and how their mother-son bond charts a narrative of the last fifty years of revolutionary Black American politics. Words for My Comrades is the story of how the energy of the Black political movement was subsumed by culture, and how America produced two of its most iconic, enduring revolutionaries.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
lil1inblue
post image
Pickpick

Well researched and utterly fascinating. The last 2 chapters felt like the author ran out of time. He was a bit scattered in pulling everything together. However, the rest of the book is much more polished.

While the author doesn't explore the myriad theories surrounding Tupac's murder, I am more convinced than ever that he and Biggie were cointelpro-ed.

ChaoticMissAdventures I have not read this one yet but there is a new one coming that I got my hands on that is very good that dives deep into Tupac's last day. It comes out Oct 21 2w
ChaoticMissAdventures Also so sad that Assata passed this weekend. Her story is amazing and I feel this whole family was done such an injustice. 2w
lil1inblue @ChaoticMissAdventures I've seen that book, but haven't heard a lot about it yet. I'll have to look into it! And yes, so sad for Assata. I hope she rests in power. 🖤 2w
38 likes4 comments
blurb
lil1inblue
post image

I'm reading the tagged book, so I'm also revisiting 2Pac's albums in chronological order. I know his first album isn't considered his best musically or production-wise. But he had so much to say! I find the power of the words overshadows any production short-comings.

#tuesdaytunes @TieDyeDude

TheBookHippie Same. His lyrics are everything. 1mo
33 likes2 comments
blurb
lil1inblue
post image

Reading and eating take out in bed because it's hot and the bedroom has the air conditioner.

#fridaynightreadinghour @mcctrish

mcctrish Yum 2mo
kspenmoll Yum & fun to read in bed where it is cool! 2mo
Aims42 Your dinner looks aaaaaaamazing! 🤤 Enjoy it and the cool a/c 🙌 2mo
See All 6 Comments
TheBookHippie Oh yummmmm 2mo
AmyG Dinner, in bed, with books and AC??? 🙌🏻 2mo
lil1inblue @mcctrish @kspenmoll @aims42 @thebookhippie @amyg It was a fabulous Friday night! My gyros from the local sandwich shop was delish, and I read happily while MisterInBlue watched movies. 😍😍😍 2mo
47 likes6 comments
review
ncsufoxes
post image
Pickpick

“The trick is to never lose hope.”-Tupac Shakur I really loved this look into Tupac‘s life. The book is more about how his experiences in his life shaped the artist that he became. His mom was a Black Panther & Tupac was raised in NYC area. He was exposed to the Black Panther Party & Young Lords that shaped his view of capitalism, racism, sexism, the police state. His music spoke out against the things he felt were harming people

ncsufoxes more than helping them. The book also highlights rap post Tupac. “The world has embraced Tupac as an icon of anti-establishment defiance, a cipher of self- determination who could speak truth to power with charisma and courage.” #antifabookclub @Chrissyreadit 3mo
Chrissyreadit Thank you for sharing! The Black Panthers are a group that i remember being demonized while they were doing so much good trouble ❤️ 3mo
ncsufoxes @Chrissyreadit yes. As I‘ve been reading more books about the Civil Rights era, I‘ve come to realize that I never learned much or it was negative. The Black Panthers & Malcom X were made to be radicalized, dangerous people & therefore bad. It‘s amazing when you learn outside of colonized narratives how much was missed & underrepresented. 3mo
Chrissyreadit @ncsufoxes exactly! and why education terrifies so many maga. 2mo
29 likes1 stack add4 comments
blurb
ncsufoxes
post image

Beach reading: my husband is sleeping, no kids to wrangle, enjoying the sound of the ocean & a good book

lil1inblue I just started this one, too! 3mo
ChaoticMissAdventures I need to add this one, I just started Jeff Pearlman's new one and I have always thought Tupac was too special for us all. 3mo
ncsufoxes @ChaoticMissAdventures ohh, that one sounds good too. Looking forward to see what you think. I‘m only 46 pages in but so far it‘s really interesting. I was in college when Tupac died & kind of listened to his music but only songs everyone else was listening to. Now I understand his music was about more but I also didn‘t really understand racism & oppression like I do now. 3mo
33 likes1 stack add3 comments