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GeoClan.com brings you The Barbershop Notebooks a
column by our friend and family Marc Lemont
Hill. Hill's on the site because like
they say "Great minds think alike"
and Hill will bring you a wise youthful
voice of cynicism, candor and analysis. Be sure to check it out on a regular basis
as Hill goes over all topics under the
sun.

A
few weeks ago, I decided to come out of
self-imposed retirement and play a game
of Sunday pick-up basketball with some
friends. Except for my decreased talent
and increased laziness, the game was like
thousands of others that I'd played in
my lifetime: two solid hours of intense
cheating, ball hogging, and shit talking;
countless victories and losses that meant
everything at the moment but would soon
be forgotten after a few days of deadlines,
meetings, and personal drama; and, most
important, more brotherly love and affection
than I had experienced in months. And
while none of the other 13 brothers who
were there would likely admit it, a major
reason for their presence on the court
that morning was for collecting all the
hugs, high-fives, chest bumps, and ass
smacks that comprise any ghetto basketball
game.
What
all of us needed, in addition to consummating
our passion for the game and savor for
intense competition, was a space for offering
the type of caring touches, kind words,
and genuine regard for other brothers
that most of us possess but aren't permitted
to share except under very limited and
heavily surveyed conditions. Where else
but a basketball court, football field,
or other such place could that thug ass
nigga with the Sunni Muslim beard who
didn't know me from a can of spray paint
place his hand on the small of my back
and ask if I was okay as I desperately
gasped for air? Where else would I not
have thought twice about it? Although
none of my comrades checked their homophobia
at the out-of-bounds line - for instance,
words like "faggot" were used
countless times that day - they were able
to momentarily escape the world of hypermasculine
cool poses and ice grills, let their guards
down, and be someone slightly different
and better.
My
point here isn't that black men sneak
off to basketball courts to indulge their
homoerotic impulses. (This is a necessary
caveat given America's current obsession
with the Down Low, which has degenerated
into a homophobic witch hunt that reiterates
the notion of the Black penis as a weapon
of mass destruction.) In fact, there is
little or nothing (necessarily) sexual
about the practices that I am describing.
On the contrary, the basketball court
provides a space in which we instinctively
separate the homosocial from the homosexual,
the affectionate from the erotic.
Further, I am pointing to the basketball
court, in spite and because of its shortcomings,
as a site of possibility for the development
of what cultural critic Mark Anthony Neal
calls the "New Black Man".
In
his fascinating new book, New Black
Man (Routledge, 2005), Neal discusses
the contours and contradictions of black
masculinity and argues for a more expansive
conception that tries to discard much
of the sexist and homophobic ideology
that has historically informed our understandings
of what it means to be a "real man".
Neal rightly notes that the New Black
Man is not a utopian vision of masculinity,
but a "metaphor for an imagined life" that can serve as a guidepost on the journey
to self-improvement and collective struggle.
It is from this position that I look to
the basketball court as a place to break
the rules of traditional black masculinity
and articulate a different notion of New
Black Manhood. This notion is neither
threatened nor compromised by acts of
same-sex love, affection, consideration,
and tolerance.
Of
course, the basketball court is not the
exclusive site for transgressive performances
of masculinity. The black church also
provides a space where men can partially
shed their secular masculinities and display
their undying love and attachment to God
through the adoration of a gendered, raced,
and sexed body of Jesus. As a church-going
child, I witnessed countless instances
where otherwise "normal" men
dropped to their knees, cried, and danced
in an impassioned frenzy for the man whose
bodily images were plastered around the
sanctuary.
Despite
my longtime estrangement from the church,
I am still nearly moved to tears by biblical
narratives of fraternal healing, caring
and touching from Jesus to his followers.
Unfortunately, the same church that offers
these narratives also provides vocal support
or willful ignorance to the homophobic
beliefs and practices of its parishioners,
clergy, and other leaders, many of whom
(including the most public and televisible)
are quite possibly engaged in the very
practices that they condemn. Nevertheless,
the church remains a place that we can
look to for direction and hope with regard
to challenging masculinity. What would
it mean for brothers to show that type
of love and devotion within and outside
of the church without sacrificing the
bodies and spirits of women and gays?
Hip-hop
culture also provides another important
space for practicing forms of masculinity
that diverge from the perceived norms.
Good or bad, a critical part of hip-hop's
legacy will likely be its focus on same
sex bonds. All-male rap crews, countless
odes to lost friends, "homeboy hugs"
(half-handshake/half-hug), and "niggas
over bitches" mantras all index hip-hop's
obsession with male relationships. This
preoccupation even spills into the zone
of the homoerotic, as in the case of men
who "run trains", or participate
in group sex acts (simultaneous or successive)
with multiple other men and one woman.
Although the practice of running trains
retains its heterosexual veneer by placing
the female body as the exclusive point
of erotic attention, its social value
within the culture is directly linked
to the level and quantity of participation
and interaction among the men.
While
hip-hop's transformative potential is
ultimately hampered by its pervasive misogyny
and homophobia - the same brother who
runs trains will feign confusion, disdain,
or disgust for same-sex romantic relationships
- it nonetheless provides a fertile site
for further analysis. What would it mean
for brothers to display that kind of loyalty
and commitment without using hatred of
women and gays as the predicate for their
bonds?
While
these cultural spaces, and multiple others,
carries us to the doorstep of New Black
Manhood, each ultimately collapses under
the weight of its own vicious misogyny
and homophobia. Nevertheless, there are
important lessons to be learned from places
like the basketball court, the church,
and hip-hop culture. The challenge is
locating creative methods of sustaining
the redemptive values and practices that
emerge from gendered rule breaking while
abandoning the vicious misogyny and homophobia
that allows them to exist unchecked. This
challenge must be taken seriously in order
to realize our full potential as New Black
Men.

Marc
Lamont Hill is one of the youngest members
of the growing body of "Hip-Hop Intellectuals" in the country. His work, which covers
topics such as hip-hop culture, sexuality,
education, and politics, has appeared
in numerous journals, magazines, books,
and anthologies. In 2005, he was named
by Ebony Magazine as one of Black America's
30 future leaders. He is currently working
on several book projects, including New
Dilemmas of the Black Intellectual (with
Gregory Seaton), Media, Learning, and
Sites of Possibility (with Lalitha Vasudevan),
and a book of African American cultural
criticism. Marc Lamont Hill is an assistant
professor of Urban Education and African
American Studies at Temple University.
Trained as an anthropologist of education,
he holds a Ph.D. from the University of
Pennsylvania.
For
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an email to community@geoclan.com
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