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Barry Jenkins and Kelvin Harrison Jr. explain why “triggering” projects on the Black experience are needed

By Candice Williams May 13, 2021 | 10:00 AM


Courtesy of Netflix; Courtesy of Amazon Studios

Barry Jenkins is giving voice to an important narrative with his Amazon series The Underground Railroad. Based on Colson Whitehead‘s Pulitzer Prize-winning book of the same name, Jenkins believes his series captures more than just the trauma of those who wanted freedom, it allows for a space where we “recontextualize our ancestors and… honor them in our image.”

“I think acknowledging the trauma… is not the same as celebrating the trauma,” Jenkins tells ABC Audio. “It’s not the same as sensationalizing the trauma. It’s just acknowledging it. I think the other eight and a half hours [of the series] — because only one and a half of these episodes take place in the plantation — that’s about survival. It’s about victory. And I think that’s the reason for these images to exist.”

Like Jenkins, Kelvin Harrison Jr., who is the star of the Netflix drama Monster, sees the importance of telling both historical and contemporary stories on the Black experience no matter how triggering they may be. Harrison Jr. believes these projects are a way to “remind ourselves about what’s going on.”

“I think we can’t become complacent and start to get comfortable,” he says, before acknowledging there still needs to be a “balance.”

“Everything in moderation,” Harrison Jr. notes.  “We do need fun films. We do need things that kind of allow a place to escape… That’s important. But also, the systems are still very corrupt and they’ve been built to oppress us. They’ve been built to use us and abused us as Black people.”

“So to not be aware of those things, and to not be reminded and ignore it because it feels comfortable — is ultimately our demise to an extent,” he explains.

The Underground Railroad, starring Thuso Mbedu, is available on Amazon. Monster is streaming on Netflix.

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