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Baltimore鈥檚 Black Arts Then & Now brings to life the Chicory Revitalization Project, a public humanities initiative that revives Baltimore鈥檚 historic Chicory magazine. From 1966 to 1983, Chicory served as a powerful voice for working-class Black communities, capturing their thoughts, struggles, and dreams through unedited poetry and street chatter. Dubbed 鈥渢he most authentic microphone of black folks talking ever devised鈥 by the Baltimore Afro-American newspaper, Chicory emerged from the liberalism of the War on Poverty and the militance of the Black Arts Movement.

Since 2017, a group of former Chicory editors, scholars, librarians, poets, teachers, and young writers have collaborated to use Chicory as a catalyst for intergenerational dialogue on social justice, race, and place. Baltimore鈥檚 Black Arts Then & Now documents this joint effort, offering valuable insights for public historians, educators, and humanists.

鈥淎 model for a new kind of scholarship. . . . This is the rare volume that is equally as useful for specialists as it is for broader audiences.鈥濃擱oopika Risam, coeditor, Anti-Racist Community Engagement: Principles and Practices

鈥淭his book is desperately needed. Mary Rizzo and her colleagues provide a powerful counter to a trend within university hiring practices. They have turned over those shiny stones, allowing us to look closely at the life underneath them. This book provides the best and most transparent view of public history processes and outcomes that I have ever seen. Here, we see success and failure, conflict and resolution, negotiation and decision-making all as ongoing within an active project.鈥濃擠enise D. Meringolo, editor, Radical Roots: Public History and a Tradition of Social Justice Activism

鈥淒r. Mary Rizzo and the Chicory Revitalization Project invite readers into an indelible example of Black community and collective artmaking, centered on the journal Chicory, that also represents a vital intervention in the intellectual and cultural life of Baltimore and the surrounding region. As this brilliant gathering shows, Chicory and the Chicory Revitalization Project represent artmaking as creation, self-realization, activism, education, transformation, and praxis, and provide an invaluable model for artists seeking to speak to the pressing concerns of today and every day.鈥濃擩ohn Keene, author, Punks: New & Selected Poems

FOREWORD | ANNE VALK | TERESA MANGUM

INTRODUCTION | MARY RIZZO
Poetic Echoes, Living Futures

PART ONE

BROADSIDE | 鈥淏e More鈥 by E. A. J.-Hasan Mobutu Ngozi and 鈥淏e More Bmore鈥 by Victor Rodgers

CHAPTER 1 | MARY RIZZO
Poetry for People鈥檚 Sake: The Black Arts Movement, Emotional History, and Intergenerational Dialogue

CHAPTER 2 | MELVIN E. BROWN
Chicory: A Magazine for and from the People

PART TWO

BROADSIDE | 鈥淧oets鈥 by Vincent A. Johnson and 鈥淎ll That We Can鈥 by Rejjia Camphor

CHAPTER 3 | MARY RIZZO
Ethics and Affordances: Digitization Is the Starting Point, Not the Goal

CHAPTER 4 | SYDNEY JOHNSON
Doin鈥 It for the Gram: How Baltimore鈥檚 Chicory Revitalization Project Uses Instagram to Engage the Public

CHAPTER 5 | MARY RIZZO
A Shifting Landscape: Update to 鈥淒oin鈥 It for the Gram鈥

CHAPTER 6 | MARY RIZZO
In the Spirit Of: Creating Community Through Public Humanities

CHAPTER 7 |Why We Got Involved
Writers in Baltimore Schools by Patrice Hutton
Bard High School Early College Baltimore by Patrick Oray
DewMore Baltimore by Victor Rodgers

PART THREE

BROADSIDE | 鈥渂lack city summer鈥 by handy and 鈥淪ummer 2020鈥 by A鈥檔iya Taylor

CHAPTER 8 | MARY RIZZO
Soul of the Butterfly: Co-Creation Through Structured Flexibility

CHAPTER 9 
Co-Creation from Our Perspective

Rutgers University鈥揘ewark Students: Michael Amankwaah, Hayat Abdelal, Annoymous, Blessing Braimah
Kimberly Day
Keyma Flight
Taye Caldwell
Rejjia Camphor

CHAPTER 10 | MARY RIZZO
Removing a Team Member for Doing Harm

CHAPTER 11
Reflecting on Harm and Healing

Keyma Flight
Taye Caldwell
Markele Cullins

CHAPTER 12 | ERIN R. SANTANA

Queer Black People Just Existing: Revising Contentious Images and Captions

CHAPTER 13 | MARKELE CULLINS | MARY RIZZO
Making Revolution Irresistible: A Graphic Designer鈥檚 Perspective on Public History

CHAPTER 14 | VICTOR RODGERS
The Poet-Tree: Connecting Past and Present Through Interactive Poetry

CHAPTER 15 | MARY RIZZO
Circles of Impact: Holistically Evaluating Public Humanities Projects

PART FOUR

BROADSIDE | 鈥淵esterday I Saw Freedom鈥 by Margaret Locklear and 鈥淔ree鈥 by Taye Caldwell

CHAPTER 16 | REJJIA CAMPHOR
The Measure of Our Lives: Archiving and Teaching Language, Memory, and Chicory to Future Generations

CHAPTER 17 | PATRICK ORAY
Chicory: Organic Matter for a Civic and Revolutionary Education

CHAPTER 18 | MARY RIZZO
Be Here: Reflections on a Multimodal Digital Public History Assignment

CHAPTER 19 | MARY RIZZO
Remix and Response: Blackout Poetry

CHAPTER 20 | VICTOR RODGERS | DEVLON WADDELL | KEVIN JOHNSON JR.
The Chicory Project: Reviving Baltimore鈥檚 Voice Through Art, Activism, and Ancestral Legacy


About the Collaborators
Acknowledgments
Resources and Support
Notes
Select Bibliography

Paperback

ISBN-13
9781685970598
Retail price
$35.00
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$26.00
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Please use promo code BBA25 when prompted by shopping cart
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eBook, Perpetual

ISBN-13
9781685970604
Retail price
$35.00

Publication Details

Publication Details

Publication Date
04/21/2026
Pages
318
Trim size
6 x 9 inches
Art
27 color images
Edition
1st