Book Read Free

Doppelgangbanger

Page 1

by Cortney Lamar Charleston




  PRAISE FOR DOPPELGANGBANGER

  “If you are among us who remember Tupac and Biggie and the confusing grief of their murders; if you are among us who spun College Dropout on obsolete technologies and then found ourselves on campuses sporting a determination to render our favorite CD out of date; if you are among us who sat among cousins and cronies on either side of a divide between the fearsome city and the uneasy suburb, these poems sing to us of us. Charleston is one of our most necessary observers of Black boyhood in all its beauty and difficulty. These are poems we need to carry in our hands like a switchblade, just in case.”

  —Nate Marshall, author of Finna

  “There is no knowing Chicago until it roars, with exploded rhythms and bladed reverence, from the throat of a Black man who has lived it, who knows that the city’s directive is both nurture and scar, and who emerges from that tumult with a story no one else can tell. With linguistic and lyrical ingenuity, Cortney Lamar Charleston burns his signature into these stanzas—hip-hop serves as pulse, and the lush lines are meant to do what they do to the air. But Doppelgangbanger is so much more than an aural triumph. With an unrelenting intimacy, Charleston dares us into a narrative we think we know—Black boy vs. the scheming wiles of the city vs. the rest of his life—then backhand slaps us toward a singular experience marked by choices that can only guide the life of one man. This is unpredictability. This is intrepid insight. This is dance music. This is heartbreak. This is Black boy joy. This is a book that will work you. You best be ready—then you better tell somebody.”

  —Patricia Smith, author of Incendiary Art

  “In this lush, complex, and lyrical exploration of Black manhood, Cortney Lamar Charleston exposes trip wires, short fuses, destructive tropes, code switches, guises, and strips them to their sublime core. Doppelgangbanger forces us to examine the myriad ways we perform our masculinity, our pathologies, and the strategies we employ to downplay our genius and sensitivity in an effort to be loved and accepted. Formalistically astute, the still lifes in this collection are rendered so powerfully that we become aim and target in a single line or momentary glance. Charleston is a poet of the soul, an exalted mathematician in love’s calculus. Hang on with both hands, reader; the poems in this collection are bottomless.”

  —Willie Perdomo, author of The Crazy Bunch

  “Cortney Lamar Charleston is a master wordsmith. Charleston sees every word as an opportunity to amplify, subvert, twist, and pivot. Doppelgangbanger’s images shape shift before our eyes and elude simple reductions. Are the poems coming of age stories? Yes, and they give tender and fierce critiques of masculinity and loving portraits of family, and subvert the white gaze. This book drips with so much style, it’s actually multiple books.”

  —José Olivarez, author of Citizen Illegal

  “Once again, Cortney Lamar Charleston has proven why he is one of the most profound, singular voices of a generation. He says, “I’m beside myself almost always: A-side, B-side,” and a door into the magic of lyric opens wide. In Doppelgangbanger, Charleston offers us a study in precision, in history—he takes us on a walk toward an understanding of our cultural injuries while leading us out of the darkness, still. Doppelgangbanger is a groundbreaking collection that I can’t wait to return to.”

  —Camonghne Felix, author of Build Yourself a Boat

  THE BREAKBEAT POETS SERIES

  The BreakBeat Poets series is committed to work that brings the aesthetic of hip-hop practice to the page. These books are a cipher for the fresh, with an eye always to the next. We strive to center and showcase some of the most exciting voices in literature, art, and culture.

  BREAKBEAT EDITORIAL BOARD:

  Cofounders Kevin Coval (Creative Director) and Nate Marshall (Series Editor), Maya Marshall (Managing Editor), Safia Elhillo, Idris Goodwin, and José Olivarez

  BREAKBEAT POETS SERIES TITLES INCLUDE:

  The BreakBeat Poets: New American

  Poetry in the Age of Hip-Hop, edited

  by Kevin Coval, Quraysh Ali

  Lansana, and Nate Marshall

  This Is Modern Art: A Play, Idris

  Goodwin and Kevin Coval

  The BreakBeat Poets Vol 2: Black

  Girl Magic, edited by Mahogany L.

  Browne, Jamila Woods, and Idrissa

  Simmonds

  Human Highlight, Idris Goodwin and

  Kevin Coval

  On My Way to Liberation, H. Melt

  Black Queer Hoe,

  Britteney Black Rose Kapri

  Citizen Illegal, José Olivarez

  Graphite, Patricia Frazier

  The BreakBeat Poets Vol 3:

  Halal If You Hear Me, edited by

  Fatimah Asghar and Safia Elhillo

  Commando, E’mon Lauren

  Build Yourself a Boat,

  Camonghne Felix

  Milwaukee Avenue, Kevin Coval

  Bloodstone Cowboy, Kara Jackson

  Everything Must Go, Kevin Coval,

  illustrated by Langston Allston

  Can I Kick It?, Idris Goodwin

  The BreakBeat Poets Vol 4:

  LatiNEXT, edited by Felicia Rose

  Chavez, José Olivarez, and Willie

  Perdomo

  Too Much Midnight, Krista Franklin

  The Anti-Racist Writing Workshop:

  How to Decolonize the Creative

  Writing Classroom,

  Felicia Rose Chavez

  Mama Phife Represents,

  Cheryl Boyce Taylor

  © 2021 Cortney Lamar Charleston

  Published in 2021 by

  Haymarket Books

  P.O. Box 180165

  Chicago, IL 60618

  773-583-7884

  www.haymarketbooks.org

  info@haymarketbooks.org

  ISBN: 978-1-64259-265-8

  Distributed to the trade in the US through Consortium Book Sales and Distribution (www.cbsd.com) and internationally through Ingram Publisher Services International (www.ingramcontent.com).

  This book was published with the generous support of Lannan Foundation and Wallace Action Fund.

  Special discounts are available for bulk purchases by organizations and institutions. Please email orders@haymarketbooks.org for more information.

  Cover artwork from Eclosion by Dr. Fahamu Pecou.

  Cover design by Brett Neiman.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data is available.

  for Cameron, Camille, and Calah

  for the boy I was, the man I am, and the one I want to become

  Men can starve from a lack of self-realization

  as much as they can from a lack of bread.

  —Richard Wright, Native Son

  CONTENTS

  The Unauthorized Autobiography of Jung Thug

  I.

  Hip-Hop Introspective

  A Brief History of Poetry

  Etymology of Hoochie Mama

  The Attitude Era

  Grand Theft Auto III (2001)

  A Brief History of Violence

  Self-Portrait as a Chicken Dinner

  Still Life with the Dropout Bear Sitting in the Stands

  Keep Your Mouth Shut

  Still Life with Kendrick Lamar’s Mama’s Van

  Family and Consumer Sciences

  Animal Phat Farm

  Etymology of Gangsta

  Still Life with Crooked Painting and Bullet Holes in Grayscale

  (Sub)Urban Dictionary

  Dissplacement

  Elegy for a False Sense of Security

  Newton’s Third Law / Negritude’s First Law

  II.

  Genesis 10:11

  Apologia with a Pregnancy Test and Weeping Jesus

  The
Ballad of Addy Walker: An African-American Girl Story

  Still Life with Torso of Cornrowed Neo-Soul Sanger

  Hip-Hop Introspective

  Giving Dap

  Waves

  Louis Vuitton Timberlands

  “I Like My Women Like I Like My Cars,”

  Doppelgangbanger

  Psalm for P.

  A Can of Murray’s Pomade, 1990–Present

  Still Life with Woman and Balloons in Noir

  Gangsters, Disciples

  Still Life with the Color Orange

  Grand Street

  The Love Song of Percy Sledgehammer

  Jesus Piece

  A Character Solemnly Torn

  III.

  Self-Portrait as a Shadow

  Hip-Hop Introspective

  Lesson for Cortney

  Self-Portrait as a Tea Bag

  “When I Grow Up, I Want to Be a Martyr”

  Sonic & Knuckles (1994)

  Still Life with Young Black Woman’s Face Etched into a School Desk

  Devotion (“I Am on the Battlefield for My Lord”)

  Still Life with Light-Skinned Rapper Wearing Newsboy Cap

  Moving Day (New Kids in the Neighborhood)

  White History Month

  Still Life with Black Boy’s Face Overlaying Project Buildings

  Triggernometry

  Jumpman: A Ghazal with Pivots

  Jim Opus [jim oh-puh s]

  Still Life with Skateboarding Rapper Orbited by Nerd Paraphernalia

  No Weapon Formed Against Me Shall Prosper

  Thugonomics

  Ode to FAFSA

  On Recidivism

  Ode to the Paycheck

  “I Ain’t Mean to Scare You, Lil’ Nigga,”

  Acknowledgments

  The Unauthorized Autobiography of Jung Thug

  The fools nearly killed me trying to make me one of them:

  a loaded word of bond with dress codes and penal codes,

  postured allegiant to the culture as with the flying of flags

  from knots tied on the backs of head wraps worn hoods over.

  I can’t gunpoint when the life of this alter ego began though

  the possibility can’t be dismissed it began at gunpoint in a way,

  with an icy pressure against the temple, the mind splitting into two

  tracks while a circus of peers clowned.

  Going back far too long

  now, the camera has blurred my edges in the suggestion of motion

  even if I stood as still as the air does before shit really hits the fan.

  I truly went ass-first into fronting indifference, forbade my happy

  teeth from public reveal lest they pop the balloon of my perfectly

  round face, baby-angled, already read as kind or innocent or soft

  from the jump when I wanted respect on my name and women on

  my lap like it was said I should. And, shamefully, I did. Several

  sistas come to mind here and this doesn’t make me feel good;

  a tender touch in the moonlight goes only so far for a shadow.

  I had to break it down for myself that being down represented

  the fear of having fear.

  I still shake when the wind blows,

  scary as ever, thespian as always in all ways toward the ghost

  of a threat or disrespect passed through me then through me,

  through a thin skin then through the skin. So, to compensate—

  a mask, what Dunbar’s bars beat home way back when about

  standing in the presence of the pale folks, only that idea flipped

  upside down, what’d be a forced smile slicing the face open like

  some summertime melon instead setting scowl folds into smooth

  forehead, brown eyes set at the mouth’s corners, fixing it in the

  position of silence like rusty nails.

  If carrying nothing else,

  I learned to bring this exact look to the danger because being me

  to the fullest would be a liability, provide a sharper image for the

  hidden cameras to home in on; yes, just that fast—a certified blue,

  strolling up to the screen door with a heavy hand for knocking and

  his true hand resting so sweetly on his gun. My gun, I should say,

  since in this case the cop is also me, like that little angel or devil

  used as sitcom trope.

  Just imagine the person coming for you being you

  every time: don’t trip, you’d say, unless into the fight.

  I.

  Hip-Hop Introspective

  Starting point: South Side, Chicago. Mid-90s.

  The glory days, rocking my high-top fade.

  I’m mesmerized by a poster on my uncle’s wall.

  The black-tinted sunglasses, Jamaican dreads:

  young Stevie Wonder sitting beside the

  smiling Bob Marley, looking like two sides

  of a DJ’s vinyl, something to be sampled, cut,

  and sold like substances I’m not wise to yet.

  When records spin, I listen. This is how

  children learn here, how they become,

  come into everything they already are.

  See, my classmates and I come from all over:

  from something, from nothing, but come to

  the same school, on the same bus, religiously,

  as though we were actually confirmed Catholics.

  Every day, our ears dialed into 107.5 WGCI.

  Every ride, repeating every word, nodding our

  heads like we have naps on the brain; nappy

  or not, the bus speakers are blowout combs.

  We are Afro-American kids: the music

  more fitting for us than the collared shirts

  for black boys, plaid skirts for black girls.

  It sounded like us from the inside of our

  mamas’ wombs, new jacks with kick. And

  somehow, still, too explicit. Gritty. Aggressive.

  Skins we will grow into, to be killed softly.

  One girl I talk with has braids like Lauryn Hill.

  Six years old, already has to let herself into her

  grandmother’s empty apartment, handle keys.

  Somewhere there is a guitar she will never play.

  In due time, she will be the one who tells me

  Tupac is dead, and a blood relation of mine

  soon goes in the same way, distantly from me.

  “Tha Crossroads” music video begins to haunt me.

  Biggie bites a few bullets. My next-door neighbors

  get burglarized, not in South Side proper, though

  it moves closer than it already is on our daily drive.

  I move farther out when Mom gets a better job.

  Dad needs a wheelchair now: a hard-knock life.

  I miss hearing Boyz II Men and Blackstreet

  everywhere I go. Even the name Backstreet

  sounds stolen to me. Meanwhile, an album

  on miseducation has only my pictures inside.

  I hide my intelligence from my new peers as

  an act of protection. Eminem gives all of them

  an excuse for making conversation with me,

  and I hate Mathers for it for at least four years.

  Kids ask what FUBU means. White girls look at me

  constantly. DMX never seems to be screaming.

  The underground heads north on my playlists

  while an old poster peels away from the wall.

  I’m beside myself almost always: A-side, B-side.

  A Brief History of Poetry

  after Dan Albergotti

  All day the boy sits behind the house

  with his dog; all day the dog sits with him.

  Well before then, the boy is dog himself:

  obedient, sharp-toothed thing. Sun-kissed

  boy. Too much kissed by sun, too much

  kissed ea
rly on. Forgets his sharp teeth.

  Forgets his animal, his beast, his chain

  of events that keeps him in yard. Swoons

  to the song of chain in swish. Fetches after

  the orange ball like a good dog. Dog of sun.

  Dog of Jesus. Dog that kneels when told,

  genuflects on cue, that loves the sound of

  tambourines, of metals fracturing silence.

  He gets fed good meats. Plays with bones,

  or studies archaeology, as some may call it.

  Unearths. Devolves as he evolves. Hypothesizes

  he is mutt on his father’s side, probably of

  mixing by force. He is boy now, the smallness

  of men. Wants his own dog, no longer to be

  dog, wants to be man. Finally gets dog that

  he sits with behind the house, the house he

  gets moved from, made to mix by force of

  proximity. Finds himself having to kiss up

  because he is too sun-kissed to be down

  with the other boys. Doesn’t use the same

  words, or uses the same words differently.

  Can’t figure out if he is still barking or they are.

  All his old friends were his dogs, but he is boy

  now, so he thinks, not completely hip to his

  mouth re-learning the shape of certain words,

  why suddenly they interest him like the hind-

  quarters of a bitch, an instinct he should be

  beyond, may have accidentally taught himself,

  become dog again when his first dog died: when

  it had a stroke behind the house and he sat there

  with it until his father could cart it off to sleep.

  Etymology of Hoochie Mama

  I’m new to his neighborhood. He is equally

  new to mine—the two, divided by a dotted line

  like always, by colors and the casual violence

  that implies, a parallel to the universe of blocks

  fifty minutes away but not yet perverted by pistols.

  And not yet a pound of dap between us either,

  because this is the first chill, boys on trial basis,

  a referee-striped sight with he and me sitting side

  by side, a whistle in my head ready to blow foul

  if need be as we’re watching TV, the videotape

  I thieved from the parental collection, a rated-R

 

‹ Prev