Antagonistic Cooperation

Jazz, Collage, Fiction, and the Shaping of African American Culture

Robert O'Meally author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Columbia University Press

Published:1st Mar '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Antagonistic Cooperation cover

This book explores the connections between jazz, art, and literature in African American culture, illustrating a rich history of collaboration and creativity.

In Antagonistic Cooperation, Robert G. O’Meally delves into the intricate interplay between African American jazz, art, and literature. Through the lens of prominent figures such as Romare Bearden and Jean-Michel Basquiat, O’Meally illustrates how these artists have shaped and informed one another’s work. He highlights the collaborative yet competitive nature of jazz, which Ralph Ellison aptly termed 'antagonistic cooperation.' This concept serves as a foundation for understanding the rich tapestry of Black creativity throughout the twentieth century.

O’Meally argues that rather than depicting a fractured identity, these artists embraced the improvisatory spirit of jazz and the techniques of collage to portray a layered and complex sense of Blackness. By examining the works of literary giants like Toni Morrison and Ralph Ellison alongside the musical contributions of Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, the author uncovers a shared ethos that emphasizes community in the creation of art. This perspective not only enriches the understanding of their individual contributions but also reveals a collective narrative that speaks to the broader African American experience.

Ultimately, Antagonistic Cooperation provides a fresh historical account of Black aesthetics, underscoring the hope and resilience embedded in these artistic expressions. O’Meally’s insightful readings illuminate how these cultural figures have not only chronicled Black history but also offered pathways toward realizing the promises of American democracy, making this work essential for anyone interested in the intersections of art, music, and literature.

A "Best Books of Summer 2022" Pick * Boston Globe *
A masterpiece—from the Angela Davis moment at the beginning to the incredible and inimitable readings of Paris Blues at the end! O'Meally has given the world (with all of your unruly Black cosmopolitanism!) the definitive takes on Louis Armstrong and Duke Ellington, Ralph Ellison and Albert Murray, Toni Morrison and Romare Bearden of and for our generation! -- Cornel West
Embrace disturbs. Accompaniment unsettles. Musically, Robert O’Meally tells us that black visual and literary art always tell us that black music always tells us this with love. O’Meally’s generously receptive perception is attuned to collage’s rich austerities. In showing that antagonistic cooperation is our program, Antagonistic Cooperation is a wonder! -- Fred Moten
Robert O'Meally's interdisciplinary brilliance shines throughout the pages of Antagonistic Cooperation. Here he brings a lifetime of reading, listening, looking, learning, and leading to bear upon extraordinary works by America’s most innovative artists, among them Romare Bearden, Louis Armstrong, Toni Morrison, and Ralph Ellison. His luminous prose and clear analysis make this book itself a contribution to the body of work under consideration. An extraordinary accomplishment. -- Farah Jasmine Griffin, author of Read Until You Understand: The Profound Wisdom of Black Life and Literature
Ever lively and cautiously optimistic, Antagonistic Cooperation is a moving revival of jazz-democracy discourse in downbeat times. O’Meally passes on a lifetime of tales and insights, vivid and learned, revealing rhymes among Black music, African American writing, and American political thought. -- William J. Maxwell, author of F. B. Eyes: How J. Edgar Hoover's Ghostreaders Framed African American Literature
In a masterful manner befitting his decades at the helm of the New Jazz Studies, Robert O’Meally in Antagonistic Cooperation narrates the contrapuntal encounters that have provided the dynamic tension driving African American arts forward. What O’Meally makes profoundly clear is that artistic energy is uncontainable, that great artists are uncategorizable, and that conflict is not something to fear; when understood in its highest aspect, it is the key to evolution and transcendence within the polyphony and polyrhythm of human life. -- Michael E. Veal, Henry L. and Lucy G Moses Professor of Music, Yale University
Highly recommended. * Choice Reviews *
A rich and rewarding read that provides a new understanding of Black cultural expression and hope for fulfilling the broken promises of American democracy. * Journal of Jazz Studies *
Antagonistic Cooperation puts three of the most influential African American artists of the twentieth century – Louis Armstrong, Ralph Ellison and Romare Bearden – in conversation in an accessibly interdisciplinary text. * U.S. Studies Online *

  • Winner of Columbia University Press Distinguished Book Award 2023
  • Commended for Pauli Murray Book Prize in Black Intellectual History, African American Intellectual History Society 2023
  • Commended for Historical Nonfiction Legacy Award, Hurston / Wright Foundation 2023

ISBN: 9780231189187

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

296 pages