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Amiri Baraka

Highest Rated: 100% Return to Gorée (2007)

Lowest Rated: 38% The Ballad of Greenwich Village (2005)

Birthday: Oct 7, 1934

Birthplace: Newark, New Jersey, USA

A figure of both praise and controversy, Amiri Baraka was a renowned activist and writer of poetry, drama, and essays. He was born Everett LeRoi Jones in Newark, New Jersey on October 7, 1934. He was an avid academic, having enrolled in Rutgers University, Howard University, Columbia University, and New School for Social Research. Although he never completed his studies to earn a degree, his literary and sociological studies nonetheless influenced his beliefs and his work. Baraka was active in the Civil Rights movement and penned several essays and plays about race relations, such as the polarizing play "Dutchman" (1964) in which a white woman harasses a black man in a subway station. His attitudes often reflected an absolutist and militaristic view, especially after the assassination of Malcolm X. In 1967, he embraced the Africa-centric view of Kawaida and adopted the name Imamu Amear Baraka, later changed to Amiri. He continued to write thought-provoking essays as well as teach in higher education. He lectured at San Francisco State University, served as a visiting professor at Columbia University, and became a full-fledged professor at Rutgers University in 1984. In July 2002, New Jersey governor Jim McGreevey appointed Baraka as the state's second Poet Laureate, a distinguished position created in 1999 in order to promote and encourage poetry throughout the state. However, Baraka's brief tenure as the Poet Laureate of New Jersey was quickly mired in controversy. On the first anniversary of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001, Baraka publically read an inflammatory poem titled "Somebody Blew Up America?" during the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival, in which he espoused several conspiracy theories that implied the state of Israel was complicit in the attacks. The ensuing public and media backlash called for his resignation, but Baraka stubbornly refused to step down. Without any legal recourse to force Baraka from the position as Poet Laureate, Governor McGreevey abolished the position in July 2003. In his later years, Baraka had a long struggle with diabetes and was placed in the intensive care unit at the Beth Israel Medical Center in Newark, NJ in early December 2013. Deteriorating health and apparent complications from a recent surgery finally took their toll when Baraka passed away on January 9, 2014.

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Highest rated movies

100% 36% Return to Gorée Watchlist
92% 79% Obscene
Watchlist
86% Why Is We Americans? Watchlist 76% 68% Bulworth Watchlist
64% 65% The Nature of Existence
Watchlist
43% 70% Piñero
Watchlist
38% The Ballad of Greenwich Village
Watchlist
The Pact
Watchlist
Coney Island of Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Watchlist
W.E.B. DuBois: A Biography in Four Voices
Watchlist

Filmography

Movies

Credit
86% No Score Yet Why Is We Americans? Self - 2020
64% 65% The Nature of Existence Unknown (Character) $52.8K 2009
100% 36% Return to Gorée Unknown (Character) - 2007
92% 79% Obscene Unknown (Character) - 2007
No Score Yet No Score Yet The Pact Self - 2006
38% No Score Yet The Ballad of Greenwich Village Unknown (Character) - 2005
No Score Yet No Score Yet Keeping Time: The Life, Music & Photographs of Milt Hinton Unknown (Character) - 2003
43% 70% Piñero Self $302.3K 2001
76% 68% Bulworth Rastaman (Character) $26.4M 1998
No Score Yet No Score Yet Coney Island of Lawrence Ferlinghetti Unknown (Character) - 1996
No Score Yet No Score Yet W.E.B. DuBois: A Biography in Four Voices Screenwriter - 1996
No Score Yet 74% Poetry in Motion Unknown (Character) - 1982
No Score Yet No Score Yet The New-Ark Director,
Screenwriter
- 1968
No Score Yet 72% Dutchman Writer,
Screenwriter
- 1966