Page Ten THE SUMMER DAILY Harlem RAPPIN' AND STYLIN' OUT: COMMUNICATION IN URBAN B L A C K AMERICA, edited by Thomas Kochman. University of Illinois Press, 424 pages, $12.50,. By HAROLD W. CRUSE BACK IN 1944, Dan Burley, a popular black Harlem news- paper columnist, published a paperback originally called Dan Burley's Original Handbook of Harlem Jive. It was the first extended dictionary of the lan- guage of the urban type of black personality known as the "Har- lem hep cat." The hep cat was a peculiar product of Harlem of the 1930s and the prototype of the black "ghetto hustler" who emerged as a community sub- group with a very distinguish- able life style. The colloquial language of the hep cat was called "jive tallt," an argot that was consciously cultivated in Harlem's jive so- ciety as an inner circle means of Ii n g u i s ti c communication among themselves. A very com- mon example of the orthography of this language was the adjec- tive "beat." If a person or ob- ject was "beat," it meant that the person or object was "non descript," "decrepit," "p o o r," "ugly," "down and out," "bor- ing," "tired," "exhausted," or "broke" (monetarily). SOME TWENTY years later the adjective "beat" had entered the lexicon of the white world. I recall that even C. Wright Mills, the e in n e n t sociologist, once used the word in his writings, and the 1950s "white hipster" of San Francisco and New York's Greenwich Village whose philoso phy, life style, artistic and liter- ary values were celebrated in the novels of Jack Kerouac was called the "beat generation." In this instance, being "beat" meant "spiritually beat," which is not precisely what the original tar- lem hep cat meant by "beat," although there is some emphatic correlation involved. The prob- lem here was that the 1950s beat generation did not acknowledge that the concept of "beatness" had been transferred from the black world of Harlem into the chic language of the white "de- viant" by way of the black jazz musician. Later on, the younger extreme nonconformists that followed the heyday of Kerouac's beat gener- ation were called "beatniks," a generational phenomenon t h a t lasted only a few years. After that they were "hippies," which, again, harks back to the original terminology created by the hep cat. DAN BURLEY described "jive talk" as "language in mo- tion," In jive language, a person whob was uninitiated was a "square" or a "lame" (sometimes "lane"). The lexicon of jive talk was pretty extensive; Burley's dictionary I i s t e d almost eight hundred words, many of which evoked a variety of meaning. The hep cat could engage in long dis- courses entirely in jive. As a "defense mechanism," the moti- vations behind the cultivation of jive talk was mainly to confuse and confound whites, who were called "grays" (or greys). The grays were placed at the top of the list of the "uninitiated," but even a fellow black could be labeled a square if he was not identified with the life style of the hep cats. To be a genuine hep cat one had to have the soul of a hustler-the male who was committed to living by his wits withoult holding down a legiti- mate job (holding down a "slave"). But the Harlem community of the depression of the 1930s was a place where most everybody was "hustling" to some degree in order to subsist. Yet most Harlemites who were not on re- lief (welfare) tried to work on those ten to twelve dollar a week "slaves" downtown, some- times indulging in low-key hustl- ing on the side, e.g. pla; numbers. As a result, th ing line between the pure Harlem hep cat as a s and the ordinary Harlem was often quite blurred. genuine hustler, the real1 was a type recognized b Harlemite. He was a ci that was imitated and a especially by the young both male and female; also suspect, if not avoi others as a person with underworld connections. easily recognized by his esque sartorial extremis wide-rimmed Stetson h exaggerated English drag dered suit with ankle-siz on his tapered trousers. But it was his langua language of "jive," that password into the inner the hep cat. It was a world that was both allur sordid; adventurous and ous for the "square." Th of the inner society of cat had nothing to do wi (or even black) stand "morality." In the, game sonal survival, the hep not "immoral" but "amo him, any enterprise, de hustle, any kind of collb scheme or device was e as long as it was p. enough to maintain a r existence without having down a slave. In this rei hep ying the pologists and writers.' fe divid- Thomas Kochman, a p type of speech, has established ubgroup lines and fixed the 1 citizen around the subclass Yet the this study is focused. hep cat, tum comprises a rail y every defined young genera haracter ner-city dwellers, calle idmired, the "cool people" or " blacks, ple," from w h i c h he was contemporary version ded, by hustlers whose langu possible special idiom of th He was Authors such as Clau pictur- and the 1960s "black m - the ists" such as H. Rap at, the cited as genuine repr pe-shoul- of the stratum. H. R ed cuffs for example, in an ex his book Die, Nigger, "The street is wh' age, the oloods get their edu was the from reading about world of Jane going to the zoo hring and Claude Brown, who hazard- Harlem, describes it a e ethics -"The language of s the hep it might be called, '5s th white or 'colored English'-i ards of honest vocatl portray of per- America. The roots ofi cat was than three hundredy ral." To Not only is the ling al, any acter of black cultura oration, cation examined and gitimate but also black music rofitable fashion of Charles K Marginal Urban Blues remains to hold And there is that here 'ard the elusive area of non( cat... The editor, family-kinship relationships, and rofessor of dress differently." I the guide- An understandable f I a w in parameters sotne of the reasoning in this on which book, however, is that some of This stra- the authors, including the editor, her loosely have assumed that the language, tion of in- living style, the "kinesics," etc., d by others of the "street people," as de- 'street peo- fined, are the true generic per- comes the sonification of the social roots of of khetto what they, the social scientists, age is the perceive as "black culture." te streets. Street people, says one author, ide Brown, John Horton, do not exist by the revolution- time schedules of industrial so- Brown are ciety, which is "clock time," esentatives Moreover, standard American .ap Brown, middle-class clock time is di- cerpt from rected toward the future; it is Die, says: also "rational and impersonal." ere young "In contrast, time for the lower cation, not class is directed toward the pre- Dick and sent, irrational and personal. ." Peasants, Mexican - Americans, grew up in Negroes, Indians, workers are nother way 'lazy'; they do not possess the ooul-or, as American virtues of ambition poken soul' and striving for success." Thus s simply an street people live by "street l of black time." They are known to the it are more outside world as "hoods," hood- years old." lums who live on and off the uistic char- streets. They are recognizable by tic char- their own fashions in dress, hair reassessed, stles, gestures, and speech, and rafter the also by their acti ities "-duk- .eil, whose tg (fighting or at least look Sa classic. ing tough), "hustling" (any wiy a very of making money outside the a sorer co- legitimate world of work), "gig .i n g (partying), and by their apparent nonactivity, "hniging" on the corner. What is called elsewhere in this study the "hus- tling ethic" cannot manage to function in the ghettoes if con- sciousness is bracketed into the temporal regulations of clock time. Street people are all pre- sumed to possess the hustling ethic. REGARDING this outlook, the socialist Julius Hudson cri- ticizes the social scientists, whose works share one short- coming: "They focus almost exclusive- ly on the typical, impoverished, black lower class. They fail to give attention to members of the black lower class who are atypi- cal in socioeconomic and other respects. Sociology and other academic disciplines have failed to produce a thorough study of the subculture of the black hust- ler, to be specific, the hustler in general." The present study attempts to correct this flaw in sociological approaches, but it implies that the hustling subculture and the street people lifestyle is deviant not only to conformist middle- class black norms but also to - the "typical, impoverished, black lower class" who might be near- ly as conformist to white middle- class norms as the black middle- class in social aspirations if not affluent acquisitions. In this fa- shion Hudson himself casts some doubts on just how representa- tive of black culture value total are the street people and the hustlers. The problem is not solved by the claims made in this book by the Baratz team and others that the aim of the-e methodology is to define black culture solely in "black terms." The studies on- ly partly achieve this. For one thing, such a reorientation of the traditionally ethnocentric focus on black cultural styles and be- it) scientifi- havior is coming very late. In "kinesics." fact, it might be coming too explored by late. enjamin G. One should be obligated to say Sithole. The amen to any degree of intellect- in' out" is ual, theoretical, and academic al manner- progress made on any social sci- T the street ence front as better late than 'ms neither never. But it would help if a middle-class number of the contributors rea- hen Baratz, lized how late they really are in ists, assert view of the worsening situations have had in the black ghettoes of Ameri- study and ca. More than that, a review of -or: "Many the contents of Dan Burley's roll their book on Harlem jive mentioned ittle dance earlier not only indicates how peak. a dis- late in history is Kochman's edi- sh extended tion, but also that the contribu- Wednesday, June 27, 1973 tors do not realize that their lateness make their investiga- tions all the more limited in terms of assessing both the forms and content of black cul- tural norms. MUCH is made by the Baratz team, for example, of the necessity of rejecting the "social pathology" model otherwise known as the "culture of pover- ty" or "deficit" model in order to approach black culture on its own terms rather than by com- parisons with certain "hypothe- sized pan-cultural norms" which are value - laden with racist prejudices. Kochman, in this re- gard, points out that the book is an attempt to get beyond what Albert Murray, author of The Omni - Americans, has called the "fakelore of black pathology" and its corollary the "folklore of white supremacy." However, in dealing with the cultural ramifications of the ur- ban condition today it cannot be said that the social pathology model is all wrong. It is the ghetto blacks themselves who are the chief victims of ghetto crime rates. Anyone who main- tains that blIcks robbing, shoot- ing, killing, and drug saturating tther blacks is not a pathological condition is not facing sub-cul- tir:l realities. It is true thit so ci1 scientists cited by lan Itid- so sch as Kenneth Clark, Hor- ace Cnytris, St. Clair Drike, and others htve tended to focus al- most exclusively on the "typical, impoverished, black lower class" which does not participate in the subculture of the hustling street people. It is precisely these poor "typical, impoverished, black lower class(es)," however, who bear the brunt of crime by blacks against other blacks, crime that springs from the mul- tifarious activities of the hust- ling subculture. John Hudson gets arounds this problem not by glorifying the philosophy of the hustler's ethic but by asserting that the hustlers he interviewed claimed that the "games" they played did not represent "crimes of violence against individuals" but were a means of "making it without kill- ing oneself on whitey's jobs" ac- complished by "tactful circum- ventions of the law." Thus, in at- tempting to define "black cul- ture" in "black terms," the book Rappin and Stylin' Out is forced to define "black crime" in "black terms" in addition to "black folk music," "motion and feeling through music," "names, graffitti, and culture," "black poetry - where it's at," "lovers and exploiters" (a euphemism for the lifestyle of pimping). ALL OF this, of course, is quite legitimate and also timely for the social scientists, but the study raises a number of ques- tions and provocative specula- tions growing out of the study's limitations in scope. For one, thing, all the studies contributed on "black language" such as Claude Brown's "Language of -Soul" and Kochman's "Ethno- graphy of B I a c k American Speech Behavior" allude to the importance of black language as a unique style of "communica- tion." The language of the street people of the seventies is not nearly as extensive and pliant as the language of jive of the thir- ties when the hepcat could in- dulge in long conversations or orations solely in jive language without being understood by the outsider. CAROLYN Rodger's article o "Black Poetry-Where It's A0 only proves this argument that black language has,.in fact, lost much of its originality. Most of the contemporary black poetry that she exhibits is not composed in what the linguists identify as "language of soul," "black English," etc., but in good old standard English. What makes most of her poetry selections "black" are the ideas, senti- ments, and the "teachin"' as- hep cat was, at once, the epi- tome of the black cynic, the black rebel, the restricted out- law, and the extreme hedonist all rolled into one. He was all of these things on the nonintellec- tual level of the dispossessed semiproletarian. R A P P I N' AND Stylin' Out: Communication in U r b a n Black America reveals a num- ber of interesting contributions to what is called the new social science. What is presented is an ambitious anthology of articles and papers by 28 investigators who are linguists, psychologists, sociologists, musicians, anthro- munication (stylin' ou cally designated as Kinesics is uniquelye such specialists as B Cooke and Elkin T. black mode of "styl observed in the soci isms and behavior of people, which confor to white nor blackx norms. Joan and Step a team of behavior that "genetic racists ample opportunity to describe black behav Afro-Americans do eyes, perform a I when they laugh, s1 tinct dialect, establit