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What’s That Buzz? What’s That Buzz?
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The Cultural Mulatto The Cultural Mulatto
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Blaxploration Blaxploration
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Standing Flat-Footed and Troubling Blackness Standing Flat-Footed and Troubling Blackness
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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10 Standing Flat-Footed and Talking: W. Kamau Bell Talks Race in an Age of “Post-Race”
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Published:November 2021
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Abstract
Google W. Kamau Bell and he appears to have been everywhere. His is a distinct anti-racist perspective in blogs, podcasts, magazine essays, a televised series, and CDs of his standup work. From a broad comedy universe, Bell tackles the contradiction of racism in a (so-called) post-racial age head-on. In a world where old media meets new, W. Kamau Bell embodies a current generation of comedians who fit squarely with critic Megan Garber’s claim that comedians are the new public intellectual. The ways in which Bell stands flat-footed and talks race in an age of postrace is reviewed systematically in this chapter by Monique Taylor, through what Bertram Ashe calls the post-soul matrix—an analytical framework for cataloguing the artistic sensibilities of an African American generation that relies on fluid rather than fixed markers or containers of “blackness.”
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