Black Art Is Lit | Black Literature, Culture and Iconic Stories Podcast Por Nykieria Chaney arte de portada

Black Art Is Lit | Black Literature, Culture and Iconic Stories

Black Art Is Lit | Black Literature, Culture and Iconic Stories

De: Nykieria Chaney
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Black Art Is Lit is where great books by Black authors get the introduction they deserve. Hosted by Nykieria Chaney, each episode is an invitation: hear the summary, experience the full first chapter read aloud, and decide if this is the story you've been looking for. No reviews. No analysis. Just the author's words, their craft, and the joy of discovery. Whether you're a lifelong reader or just getting started, this is your weekly gateway to voices that matter, stories that resonate, and books that deserve to be read. New episodes weekly.Nykieria Chaney Arte Historia y Crítica Literaria
Episodios
  • Tony Lamair Burks II - We Listen & We Don't Judge
    Mar 19 2026

    This week on Black Art Is Lit, we’re reading We Listen & We Don’t Judge by Tony Lamair Burks II.


    Chapter 1, “The Principal, the Pastor, and the Pep Rally,” places us in a real-time decision where leadership, community expectations, and student safety all collide. What seems like a straightforward moment quickly becomes a deeper question of power, responsibility, and who is actually being protected.

    In this episode, we move through the chapter and sit with what it asks of us. Not just what we think—but what we would do when there isn’t enough time, enough information, or an option that satisfies everyone.


    We explore:

    • what it means to make decisions under pressure

    • why there is no such thing as a neutral choice

    • how power shows up in adult and student dynamics

    • and who we choose to center when it matters most



    While rooted in education, this conversation extends far beyond the classroom. These are the same tensions that show up anywhere people are sharing space and making decisions that impact others.


    If you’ve ever had to make a call that affected someone else, this episode will sit with you.


    Black Art Is Lit is a podcast dedicated to reading, reflecting, and discussing Black literature—one chapter at a time.

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    13 m
  • Kaitlyn Greenidge - Libertie
    Feb 26 2026

    This week on BlackArt Is Lit, we’re reading Libertie by Kaitlyn Greenidge, ahistorical fiction novel set in Reconstruction-era Brooklyn.

    A disciplined Black community. Dangerous medical work. Secrecy as survival.

    Libertie is growing up under a respected physician mother who can nearly pass. Libertie cannot. After the rescue of Mr. Ben, the stakes become clear and childhood quietly starts to close.

    This episode explores the novel’s opening pages, including themes of colorism, Black identity, generational pressure, Haitian lineage, organized resistance networks, and what it means to inherit a version of freedom that may not fit you.

    If you’re reading along: Pay attention to who has access and who does not

    Notice how information is controlled

    Consider how skin tone shifts mobility insidethe community

    If you’ve already read Libertie:
    Did you read the mother as protection or control
    When did you first see the fracture forming

    Follow the show, share the episode with someone who reads historical fiction or literature, and join the conversation.


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    49 m
  • Clay Cane - Burn Down Master's House
    Feb 19 2026

    In this episode of Black Art Is Lit, Nykieria Chaney introduces Burn Down Master’s House by Clay Cane. This historical novel takes place during American slavery and focuses on power, resistance, and the economic system that supported bondage.

    Within the plantation system, human life is measured by productivity and controlled through both force and narrative. Early tensions around breeding, value, and misinformation surface quickly, revealing how deeply structured this world is.

    As the story starts, bigger questions emerge. Why do we remember systems of domination more than the organized movements that fought against them? How has misinformation shaped what is remembered and what is erased? Who controls the story?

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    1 h y 10 m

Featured Article: The Best Podcasts by Black Creators to Listen to in 2023


Whether focused on literature, family, mental health, history, or the arts, these listens represent just a few of the best podcasts created and hosted by Black writers, thinkers, journalists, comedians, and trailblazers. Led by some of the most powerful voices in media, these can’t-miss listens demonstrate just how outstanding Black voices capture the particular challenges and extraordinary accomplishments of African Americans.

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love the podcast it gives a different perspective from the great black writers from the past.

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