Reviews of Habibi Funk 031, Kayatibu, and The Good Ones
Lessons of individual development rather than collective or political consciousness
		ANGUS REID reviews a book that is an important and comprehensive work of documentation
	 
			Comrade Sisters: Women of the Black Panther Party
Photographs by Stephen Shames, text by Ericka Huggins
ACC Art Books £35
IT IS impossible not to be moved by Stephen Shames’s innocent and spontaneous documentation of the communal “‘survival programmes” that were inspired by the Black Panther Party in the late 1960s and 1970s.
He was 20 years old, an amateur, and he found himself in the middle of a defiant and self-organising mass movement that was addressing existential problems in the black community in a way that was without precedent in the history of the US.
Suddenly, all of it is interesting.
	Similar stories
	 
               MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review Friendship, Four Letters of Love, Tin Soldier and The Ballad of Suzanne Cesaire
 
               ANGUS REID calls for artists and curators to play their part with political and historical responsibility
 
               RON JACOBS recommends a book filled with history and political theory that provides both a basis and inspiration to create a way forward
    
               JOE JACKSON explores how growing up black amid ‘the quiet racism of Scotland’ shaped the art and politics of Maud Sulter
   
 
               

