Aishah Rahman

Aishah Rahman, born Virginia Hughes was born November 4, 1936, in New York City, and died December 29, 2014, in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.[1] Rahman was an African-American playwright, author, professor and essayist. She was known for her participation and contribution to the Black Arts Movement, as well as her plays documenting various aspects of black life.

Life and career

Rahman grew up as a foster child in Harlem. Church was a big part of her life, and she spent her free time as a child hopping between churches.[2] She wrote her first play in sixth grade about germs for National Health week. She attended George Washington High School, and graduated in 1954.[2] She enjoyed dancing, and was particularly interested in jazz music. Rahman has attributed her interest in theater to her difficult life growing up in foster care, as she often was “a conduct problem,” but found solace in the realm of theater, where her extroversion was celebrated.[2] She attended Howard University and Goddard College, and in 1992 she became a professor of Literary Arts at Brown University. At Brown, Rahman worked to edit and create an anthology of plays from the university entitled NuMuse.

Rahman had two kids, Yoruba Richen and Kevin Brown. She has two grandchildren and five great grandchildren.

Rahman was an avid participator in the Harlem Black Arts Movement. She participated in numerous demonstrations, including in 1961 to protest the murder of Patrice Lumumba.[3] Having grown up in Harlem, Rahman felt strongly connected to the people and the movement for a “black aesthetic,” as she calls it.[4] She has published numerous essays about the movement.

The Black Arts Movement helped to propel Rahman forward as a Black playwright. She credits Adrienne Kennedy, Amiri Baraka, Sam Shepard, Frederico Garcia Lorca and Bertolt Brecht as her literary influences.[5] Further yet, Rahman’s work was strongly influenced by jazz music, and jazz’s rhythm and meter is integral to the structure and flow she establishes in her plays.[2]

Rahman was the author of numerous plays. Her styles range from dramas, such as Unfinished Women Cry In No Man's Land While a Bird Dies in Gilded Cage and The Mojo and the Sayso, to musicals, such as Lady Day A Musical Tragedy, or The Tale of Madame Zora. Her plays were produced at The Public Theater, The Ensemble Theatre and theaters and universities across the United States. Among her numerous fellowships, grants and awards are a special award from the Rockefeller Foundation of the Arts for dedication to playwriting in the American Theater, The Doris Abramson Playwriting Award for The Mojo and the Sayso, and a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship.[6]

Apart from writing plays, as a literary professor at Brown University, she also worked diligently on research that placed her worked on a documentary film project exploring performance as resistance throughout the African diaspora, and detailing her travels around the world.[7] She released her memoir, titled Chewed Water, in 2001 about her childhood in the Harlem foster care system.

Publications and Plays

For Further Exploration

References

  1. "Aishah Rahman's Obituary on New York Times".
  2. 1 2 3 4 Weaver, A. M. (1999). The jazz aesthetic of Aishah Rahman. Obsidian III, 1(1), 133+. Retrieved from http://go.galegroup.com/ps/i.do?p=AONE&sw=w&u=duke_perkins&v=2.1&it=r&id=GALE%7CA205734779&asid=2ce39c5c19c9d521c8b03d059603e76a
  3. Baraka, A. (2011). The Black Arts Movement: Its Meaning and Potential. Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art 29(1), 22-31. Duke University Press. Retrieved October 25, 2016, from Project MUSE database.
  4. Rahman, A. (2014). Living in the Black Arts Movement (Reminiscence). In Bracey J., Sanchez S., & Smethurst J. (Eds.), SOS -- Calling All Black People: A Black Arts Movement Reader (pp. 439-442). AMHERST; BOSTON: University of Massachusetts Press. JSTOR j.ctt5vk2mr.130
  5. Margulis, J.(2001). Rahman, Aishah. In The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature. : Oxford University Press. Retrieved 19 Oct. 2016, from http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195138832.001.0001/acref-9780195138832-e-475.
  6. 2016) Aishah Rahman: Literary Arts Program. Brown University. Retrieved on October 28, 2016 from https://www.brown.edu/academics/literary-arts/about/faculty/aishah-rahman/aishah-rahman
  7. (2016). Aishah Rahman: Researchers@Brown. Retrieved on October 28, 2016 at https://vivo.brown.edu/display/arahman
  8. Wadud, A. (1977, Aug 20). Aisha rahman's 'unfinished women': Brilliant. New York Amsterdam News (1962-1993) Retrieved from http://search.proquest.com/docview/226423855
  9. Koger, A. (1989). Jazz Form and Jazz Function: An Analysis of Unfinished Women Cry in No Man's Land While a Bird Dies in a Gilded Cage. MELUS, 16(3), 99-111. JSTOR 467570
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