Just Above My Head

Just Above My Head is James Baldwin's sixth novel, first published in 1979.

Just Above My Head
First edition
AuthorJames Baldwin
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
PublisherDial Press
Publication date
1979
Pages597
ISBN0-8037-4777-2

Plot introduction

The novel tells the life story of a group of friends, from preaching in Harlem, through to experiencing 'incest, war, poverty, the civil-rights struggle, as well as wealth and love and fameā€”in Korea, Africa, Birmingham, New York City, Paris.'[1]

Characters

  • Arthur Montana, a homosexual who becomes worldfamous "Emperor of Soul". He started out in a quartet, the Trumpets of Zion.
  • Hall Montana, Arthur's brother, a married man in his forties.
  • Ruth Granger, Hall's wife. Hall met her at a fundraiser.
  • Paul Montana, Arthur and Hall's late father. He was born in Tallahassee, Florida, grew up in New Orleans, moved to California and finally to New York City.
  • Florence Montana, Hall and Arthur's mother.
  • Tony, Hall's son.
  • Odessa, Hall's daughter.
  • Faulkner, a masochistic white man Arthur knew.
  • Crunch, Arthur's lover. He was a member of the Trumpets of Zion. His real name was Jason Hogan.
  • Red, a member of the Trumpets of Zion. He has become a drug addict and been to prison several times.
  • Lorna, Red's wife. She has left him, with their two sons.
  • Peanut, a member of the Trumpets of Zion. He was later murdered.
  • Jimmy, a neighbour of the Halls when they were younger.
  • Julia, Jimmy's sister.
  • Brother Joel Miller
  • Amy Miller, Julia's and Jimmy's mother. She dies shortly after a miscarriage.
  • Reverend Parker, Julia's Evangelist reverend when she was younger.
  • Mrs Bessie, a blind old black woman whom Julia took to the church when she was younger.
  • Sidney, a bartender. He was brought up by his grandmother, who died recently.
  • Martha, a young woman who works at the Harlem Hospital. She is Hall's ex-girlfriend. Her aunt, Josephine, is from the West Indies.
  • Mr Clarence Webster, a black music teacher and impresario for the Trumpets of Zion.
  • Sister Dorothy Green.
  • Blanche, Hall's landlady.
  • Faulkner Grey, a coworker of Hall's.
  • Mrs Isabel Reed, a high school teacher from Richmond.
  • Mr Reed, a lawyer from Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
  • Reverend Williams, a preacher from Richmond.
  • Mrs Elkins, a hostess in Atlanta, Georgia.
  • Guy Lazar, a ginger-haired French man Arthur dates in Paris.

Major themes

The novel enmeshes racism with homophobia, with an "explicit association of Birmingham and Sodom".[2][3]

Allusions to other works

Allusions to actual history

Literary significance and criticism

It has been suggested that the novel links the trope of the internalisation of history to what W. E. B. Du Bois defined as the African American's "longing to attain self-conscious manhood".[4]

It has been suggested that Crunch subscribes to the idea propounded by Auguste Ambroise Tardieu and Cesare Lombroso that homosexuality was inscribed upon a homosexual's flesh,[5] when he wonders, "if his change was visible".[6]

gollark: That's later.
gollark: You would also want some sort of telescope array, so you can more accurately view the Andromedans to generate a more targeted insult.
gollark: I'm not sure if it's particularly *possible* that they could eventually somehow end up doing general-intelligence stuff well, but it might be interesting as a story.
gollark: We already have neural networks optimizing parameters for other neural networks, and machine learning systems are able to beat humans at quite a few tasks already with what's arguably blind pattern-matching.
gollark: One interesting (story-wise) path AI could go down is that we continue with what seems to be the current strategy - blindly evolving stuff without a huge amount of intentional design - and eventually reach human-or-better performance on a lot of tasks (including somewhat general-intelligency ones), while working utterly incomprehensibly to humans.I was going to say this after the very short discussion about ad revenue maximizers but left this half written and forgot.

References

  1. John Romano, "Just Above My Head" (review), The New York Times, September 23, 1979.
  2. James Baldwin, Just Above My Head, New York: Dell Publishing, 1984, p. 183.
  3. Lee Edelman, Homographesis: Essays in Gay Literary and Cultural Theory, Routledge, New York & London, 1994, p. 67.
  4. Edelman, Homographesis (1994), p. 62.
  5. Edelman, Homographesis (1994), pp. 5 and 69.
  6. Baldwin, Just Above My Head (1984), p. 226.
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