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Friday, May 23, 2025

May 23, 2025: Malcolm X’s 100th: One Night in Miami

[May 19th marks the 100th birthday of Malcolm Little, better known as Malcolm X. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of cultural representations of Malcolm, leading up to a special weekend post on what we can learn from Malcolm here in 2025!]

I’m going to keep this post relatively short, as I haven’t yet had a chance to watch Regina King’s 2020 film adaptation of Kemp Powers’s 2013 stage play One Night in Miami. I hope to do so soon, as it looks like a fascinating way to reimagine all four of its central historical figures as well as contexts related to race in America, the 1960s, celebrity and cultural impact, and more. But what I especially want to highlight here is something that I discussed a bit in yesterday’s post on Selma but that it seems like this film develops even further: the reminder that any historical figure, including if not especially one as individually iconic as Malcolm X, existed in social communities. More exactly, One Night in Miami seeks to examine the friendships between its four focal figures, and thus when it comes to Malcolm to consider how such relationships might have shaped as well as been shaped by his personal, political, religious, activist, etc. interests and actions. It can be very hard with such icons to remember and engage with those human sides of their lives and identities—but I believe cultural works are uniquely positioned to help us do so, and I look forward to checking out this unique and compelling such cultural work very soon.

Special post this weekend,

Ben

PS. What do you think? Representations or other sides of Malcolm X you’d highlight?

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