Post-soul
The term post-soul was coined by Nelson George in a 1992 Village Voice feature article, "Buppies, B-boys, BAPS, and Bohos." The article contained a chronology of significant shifts in African-American culture since the 1970s, exemplified by Melvin Van Peebles, Muhammad Ali, Stevie Wonder, and James Brown. In 2005, George reworked his chronology in a book entitled Post Soul Nation: The Explosive, Contradictory, Triumphant, and Tragic 1980s as Experienced by African Americans (Previously Known as Blacks and Before That Negroes). Unlike the wider scope of George's original Village Voice article, Post-Soul Nation focuses on the 1980s to describe a series of political, social, and cultural shifts which helped reshape the African-American experience in the United States after the civil-rights era.
Post-soul opposes the soul era, emphasizing the effects of civil rights-era advancements. The soul era, like the civil rights movement, emphasized a unified black identity and experience. In contrast, the post-soul era recognized many expressions of blackness related to individuality, sexuality, gender, and class. These diverse expressions contributed to the formation of a new black aesthetic, a term coined by scholar Trey Ellis. The post-soul era defined a period in which black visibility was rapidly expanding; however, lower-class black communities did not have the same opportunities as the emerging black middle class.
Overview
In the original chronology of the post-soul era, the event that sparked George's curiosity and development of the term was the release of Melvin Van Peebles' Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song. The 1971 film told the story of a Watts-based hustler whose goal was to obtain freedom and combat police brutality.The unwillingness to conform to the white narrative in the early 1970s created a trickle-down effect that influenced filmmakers such as Spike Lee and rappers such as Ice Cube. After publishing the chronology in 1992, George published Buppies, B-boys, BAPS, and Bohos: Notes on Post-Soul Black Culture. He then published Post Soul Nation: The Explosive, Contradictory, Triumphant, and Tragic 1980s as Experienced by African Americans , which omitted the 1971-1978 from the post-soul chronology and focused on the 1979-1989 decade as the years of the "Post-Soul Nation".
George uses the term "post-soul" in his chronologies to contrast it with the soul era, which derives from the definition of soul and its association with spirituality and religion. According to George, the soul era embodied this association and was characterized by optimism and faith in the future and those who would inhabit it. In addition to being a spiritual era, the soul era was influenced by activists and revolutionary leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X. Through the efforts, triumphs, and histories of the soul era and its revolutionaries, the post-soul era developed an ideology of the black experience with its own triumphs and challenges.
The post-soul era, in contrast to the soul era, was characterized by an increased presence and acceptance of blackness in American popular culture. The increased presence of the black image brought to the forefront different representations of what being black in America looked like. Instead of a singular definition of what blackness looked like similar to the sou-era definition of blackness), the post-soul era diversified the definition.
Blackness was diversified in socioeconomic status, ideology, and expression. The black middle class grew, which led to the economic stratification of the black community. The black middle class prospered, but the black lower class did not share in the wealth and were impacted by crises such as HIV/AIDS, increased poverty, police brutality, and educational inequality. Plagued by poverty and AIDS and simultaneously uplifted, George described the post-soul era as the "best of times and the worst of times".
Authors Bertram D. Ashe and Anthony Neal understood the post-soul era as the generation of black artists and writers who emerged after the civil-rights movement, missing its impact. Ashe explores the era by describing its themes and tropes: the exploration of blackness, the archetype of the cultural mulatto, and allusion and disruption relative to the civil-rights era.