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Studying Michael Jackson’s Visual Art: 4 Reasons to ‘read’ ‘Kunstwerke von Michael Jackson’
Abstract: This online video series is designed to show learners how they can understand Michael Jackson as an artist through his visual art. Lecture by Karin Merx BMus, MA, editor of The Journal of Michael Jackson Academic Studies, and author of A festive parade of highlights. La Grande Parade as evaluation of the museum policy of Edy De Wilde […]
Episode 13 – MJAS Exclusive: Michael Jackson 58th Birthday: MJ & Afrocentricity
Abstract: This thirteenth episode is a celebration of Michael Jackson’s 58th birthday. Karin and Elizabeth’s conversation explores Michael Jackson and Afrocentricity, the predominantly American study of the history of black Africa. They discuss the many ways in which Michael Jackson was aware of, knowledgeable about, and proud of his African-American heritage, and how throughout his career, he gave a strong message […]
MJ Studies Today II (14-02-16)
Abstract: February 2016 discusses the recent news that the white actor Joseph Fiennes, was cast as Michael Jackson in an upcoming comedy program on Sky Arts. Column by Elizabeth Amisu, MA, PGCE, editor of The Journal of Michael Jackson Academic Studies and author of The Dangerous Philosophies of Michael Jackson: His Music, His Persona, and His Artistic Afterlife. Amisu, Elizabeth. […]
‘Crack Music’: Michael Jackson’s ‘Invincible’
‘Crack Music’: Michael Jackson’s InvincibleBy Elizabeth Amisu Inspired by the chapter, ‘Invincible, The Denouement Album’ from The Dangerous Philosophies of Michael Jackson by Elizabeth Amisu (Praeger, 2016). Abstract: Little academic writing has been devoted to Michael Jackson’s final studio album, Invincible. This article explores Invincible through Kanye West’s metaphor of Crack Music from the 2005 album, Late Registration and places it in the context […]
Das Phänomen Michael Jackson by Jochen Ebmeier
‘My ambition has been to write a book for the 16 year old fan as well as for the 60 year old professor of Philosophy. They all should read it with profit.’ Das Phänomen Michael Jackson was the first academic book ever written solely on Michael Jackson. On behalf of Jochen Ebmeier, The Journal of Michael […]
Das Phänomen Michael Jackson
‘My ambition has been to write a book for the 16 year old fan as well as for the 60 year old professor of Philosophy. They all should read it with profit.’
This book is a biography which places Jackson in a broader context of the aesthetic of modern entertainment and art.
Continue readingRaven Woods – Langston Hughes’s “The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain” (1926)
Placed with permission of the author Raven Woods
In 1926, poet and essayist Langston Hughes wrote a short but stirring piece that became a manifesto for the Harlem Renaissance, the great cultural movement that brought Black art, culture, and music to prominence in American society. Last spring, when I assigned this essay to one of my American Lit classes, it occurred to me that much of what Hughes wrote in 1926 could also apply to many of the trials and tribulations that Michael Jackson would endure as an African-American artist more than sixty years later. Here is Langston Hughes's essay. The sections that are highlighted are my emphasis, as these are important points that I will return to later when addressing the essay's relevance to Michael Jackson:
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