Stagnation

Stagnation
Der Artikel wird am Ende des Bestellprozesses zum Download zur Verfügung gestellt.
Frustrated Creativity and the Black Gay Question
 EPUB
Nicht lieferbar | Lieferzeit: Nicht lieferbar

14,27 €* EPUB

Artikel-Nr:
9784902837155
Veröffentl:
2014
Einband:
EPUB
Seiten:
88
Autor:
Jaha F. Cummings
eBook Typ:
EPUB
eBook Format:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

What is the greatest problem facing the Black family-community? Unlike what is being preached in many of our churches today, it is not the presence of same-sex loving people within our family-community. It is frustrated creativity. Frustrated creativity is the main issue that the Black community should be concerned with. We were created to express our creative potential as individual components of a collective soul; and we as a community are the support that ensures that each of us achieves self-mastery. If we choose to express our creative potential, we will no longer view ourselves and each other as commodities. We have been so conditioned to be commodities in this society, that many of us can only see our worth and the worth of others in the same manner that we were during slavery: breeding capacity and consumer value. This conditioning directly influences those leaders in our family-community who wish to exclude our same-sex loving family. A crisis of values has gripped us for the last forty years, when the integrity of the Black community was compromised to achieve the aims of social integration. We need to once again design our lives based on expressing our creative potential rather than on conspicuous consumption. In doing so, the quality of life for our entire family-community will be markedly improved. If we do not value every member of our family-community because they bring something special to the earth to share with us individually and collectively; we are not acting like Black people. Author Biography: Jaha F. Cummings is the director and publisher of a research organization in the Asia-Pacific region. His focus is on youth & values formation, culturally-relevant education, and culture-based national planning. He is an Ivy-League educated expert in cultural studies, traditional African philosophy, and human psychology. He is a Kabbalist and a researcher in the field of traditional African thought systems.His focus is on mental health and female reproductive issues. He is the author of Essential Ifa Reference; and co-author of Omowali: The Child Returns Home - Reconnecting Our Children With Their True Culture; Cultural Literacy and the Restoration of Traditional Values Among Youth; and Preserving Cultural Integrity in the Age of Globalization: An Educational Response.
What is the greatest problem facing the Black family-community? Unlike what is being preached in many of our churches today, it is not the presence of same-sex loving people within our family-community. It is frustrated creativity. Frustrated creativity is the main issue that the Black community should be concerned with. We were created to express our creative potential as individual components of a collective soul; and we as a community are the support that ensures that each of us achieves self-mastery. If we choose to express our creative potential, we will no longer view ourselves and each other as commodities. We have been so conditioned to be commodities in this society, that many of us can only see our worth and the worth of others in the same manner that we were during slavery: breeding capacity and consumer value. This conditioning directly influences those leaders in our family-community who wish to exclude our same-sex loving family. A crisis of values has gripped us for the last forty years, when the integrity of the Black community was compromised to achieve the aims of social integration. We need to once again design our lives based on expressing our creative potential rather than on conspicuous consumption. In doing so, the quality of life for our entire family-community will be markedly improved. If we do not value every member of our family-community because they bring something special to the earth to share with us individually and collectively; we are not acting like Black people. Author Biography: Jaha F. Cummings is the director and publisher of a research organization in the Asia-Pacific region. His focus is on youth & values formation, culturally-relevant education, and culture-based national planning. He is an Ivy-League educated expert in cultural studies, traditional African philosophy, and human psychology. He is a Kabbalist and a researcher in the field of traditional African thought systems.His focus is on mental health and female reproductive issues. He is the author of Essential Ifa Reference; and co-author of Omowali: The Child Returns Home - Reconnecting Our Children With Their True Culture; Cultural Literacy and the Restoration of Traditional Values Among Youth; and Preserving Cultural Integrity in the Age of Globalization: An Educational Response.

Kunden Rezensionen

Zu diesem Artikel ist noch keine Rezension vorhanden.
Helfen sie anderen Besuchern und verfassen Sie selbst eine Rezension.