
In a conversation with Arkestra drummer Samurai Celestial, I mentioned an interest in the required reading list that Sun Ra issued to his students when he taught his class at Cal Berkeley in the 1970s. I have personally been interested in this list for some time, as I have always wondered what Ra would recommend book- wise. Well, thanks to Samurai's kindness, he was able to supply me with a copy of the list to share with everyone.
The course was listed as "Sun Ra 171", in Afro-American Studies. Supposedly, many students could not find a lot of the titles. Samurai has read many of the books but also can't find some of them.
| Sun Ra 171 Reference List |
||
| Albums | ||
| 1. | My Brother the Wind, vols. 1 & 2 | Saturn |
| 2. | The Night of the Purple Moon | Saturn |
| 3. | The Magic City | Saturn |
| 4. | The Nubians of Pluto | Saturn |
| 5. | Atlantis | Saturn |
| 6. | Fate in a Pleasant Mood | Saturn |
| 7. | Monorails and Satellites | Saturn |
| 8. | Strange Strings | Saturn |
| 9. | Nothing Is | ESP Disc |
| 10. | Heliocentric, vols. 1 & 2 | ESP Disc |
| Books | |||
| Title | Author | Publisher | |
| 1. | Jazz Where it Came From, Where It's At | John S. Wilson | United States Information Agency |
| 2. | Black Man of the Nile | Yoseph Ben Jochannan | Alkibu Ian Books |
| 3. | Stylus, 13:1 (Spring 1971) | Temple University Student Pubications | |
| 4. | Ark of Bones | Henry Dumas | |
| 5. | Poetry for my People | Henry Dumas | |
| 6. | Black Fire | LeRoi Jones & Larry Neal | |
| 7. | The Two Babylons | Alexander Hislop | |
| 8. | Missonary Travels | Livingston | |
| 9. | Radix | Bill Looney | |
| 10. | God Wills the Negro | Theodore P. Ford | |
| 11. | God's Children | Archibald Rutledge | |
| 12. | Ruins of Empire | Volney | |
| 13. | The Source Book of Man's Life and Death (i.e, The Bible, "King James") | God | numerous |
| 14. | A New Model of the Universe | P.D. Ouspensky | |
| 15. | The Loom of Language | Frederick Bodmer | |
| 16. | Blackiesetymology | published in London, England | |
Space,
Jim Johnson
... in 1971 ... Sun Ra returned to California to become a lecturer at the University of California at Berkeley. ... with class handouts, assignments and a reading list which included The Egyptian Book of the Dead, the Radix (a 19th century astrology journal), Alexander Hislip's Two Babylons, books on etymology, hieroglyphics, color therapy, Afro-American folklore, ex-slaves' writings, the theosophical works of Madame Blavatsky, spiritually channeled tomes like The Book of Oahspe, Henry Dumas' poetry and short stories, Dr. Livingston's travels in Africa, the Bible, and accounts of the origins of the Rosicrucians.
These less detailed references do no match completely the Booklist given here on the list above, - there are missing but also additional works (apart from the question if it's Hislip, as on Evidence liner notes, or Hislop, as on the list above).
Now, when thinking of our attempt to get additional information on these works, I am getting some doubts when reading on what John F. Szwed also mentions in the liner notes:
When distressed students told Sun Ra that the books were either missing from the library or had never been there in the first place, he merely smiled knowingly.
So what? ;-)
The author's surname is, according to the Library of Congress and Amazon.com, Hislop. The Two Babylons; or, the Papal Worship was reprinted in 1997. A few interesting readers' reviews about it may be read @ amazon.com.
Richard J. Callahan, Jr.
Dept. of Religious Studies
University of California
Santa Barbara, CA 93106
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