Afrofuturism, a movement that began in the Black community during the early 20th Century as an escape from racial hostility, economic turmoil, and aggressive policing, is enjoying a renaissance witnessed by the record-breaking success of creative projects, including the Oscar-winning Marvel Studios film, Black Panther; Regina King's Emmy-winning HBO superhero tale, Watchmen; Janelle Monae's hit album, Dirty Computer; Jordan Peele's provocative feature Get Out; Octavia Butler's famed science fiction novel, Kindred; and Beyonce's visual album Black Is King. Now comes Afrofuturist Tim Fielder's beautifully written and rendered INFINITUM.
In INFINITUM, King Aja ba and Queen Lewa are revered across the African continent for their impressive political and military skills. Yet the future of their kingdom is in jeopardy, for the royal couple do not have an heir of their own. When the King kidnaps his son born to a concubine, Obinrin, she curses ba with the "gift" of immortality. After enjoying long, wonderful lives both, Queen Lewa and the crown prince die naturally, leaving the ageless bereaved King ba heartbroken and alone. Taking advantage of ba's vulnerability, enemy nations rise to power and kill the king - or so they think. King Aja ba survives the fatal attack, finally realizing the bitter fruit of Obinrin's curse.
For millennia, the immortal ba wanders the earth, mourning his lost subjects and searching for a new kingdom. His journey leads him across time, allowing him to witness the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the New World, and the American Civil Rights Movement. The expansion of global technology brings about intergalactic travel, first contact with an alien species, and conflicts within and ultimately outside the known universe. Thrust into these seminal events, ba, now known by many as "John," faces harrowing decisions that will determine mankind's physical and spiritual trajectory.
In 280 plus stunningly emotional and evocative full-color images, INFINITUM presents a unique cosmic experience, addressing issues of racism, classism, gender inequity, the encroachment of technology and the spiritual cost of war, while exposing the history behind ancient mysteries.
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In INFINITUM, King Aja ba and Queen Lewa are revered across the African continent for their impressive political and military skills. Yet the future of their kingdom is in jeopardy, for the royal couple do not have an heir of their own. When the King kidnaps his son born to a concubine, Obinrin, she curses ba with the "gift" of immortality. After enjoying long, wonderful lives both, Queen Lewa and the crown prince die naturally, leaving the ageless bereaved King ba heartbroken and alone. Taking advantage of ba's vulnerability, enemy nations rise to power and kill the king - or so they think. King Aja ba survives the fatal attack, finally realizing the bitter fruit of Obinrin's curse.
For millennia, the immortal ba wanders the earth, mourning his lost subjects and searching for a new kingdom. His journey leads him across time, allowing him to witness the trans-Atlantic slave trade, the New World, and the American Civil Rights Movement. The expansion of global technology brings about intergalactic travel, first contact with an alien species, and conflicts within and ultimately outside the known universe. Thrust into these seminal events, ba, now known by many as "John," faces harrowing decisions that will determine mankind's physical and spiritual trajectory.
In 280 plus stunningly emotional and evocative full-color images, INFINITUM presents a unique cosmic experience, addressing issues of racism, classism, gender inequity, the encroachment of technology and the spiritual cost of war, while exposing the history behind ancient mysteries.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
"An amazing tale of one man's odyssey from African king to ruler of the stars told with breathtaking visuals. INFINITUM is epic in every way! Engrossing! Powerful! Intelligent! Cinematic!" - Jerry Craft, author of the New York Times bestselling New Kid
"A merciless king is cursed to eternal life...and so begins Tim Fielder's extraordinary tale of a Black immortal seeking redemption, an epic that takes us from the dawn of civilization to its very end of the Earth. Brilliant, bold, beautiful, and deliriously, wondrously Black, INFINTUM is what might happen if the Wakandan book of Genesis and the Afrofuturist book of Revelation decided to have a kid-nothing you read this year will come close to this amazing book." - Junot Diaz, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
"This sweeping tale mirrors both the history of genre literature and the African American experience." - Publishers Weekly
"Fielder's . . . . boldly painted illustrations exhibit raw power on every page of this staggeringly ambitious epic."
- Library Journal
"With Infinitum: An Afrofuturist Tale, Tim Fielder is pushing the genre forward (and inviting others to join)." - Syfy.com
"How, you may ask, can a story this vast not be 'central' to Infinitum? (How can it feel to me like nothing?) Well, because it is too vast." - Bob Levin, Comics Journal
"A merciless king is cursed to eternal life...and so begins Tim Fielder's extraordinary tale of a Black immortal seeking redemption, an epic that takes us from the dawn of civilization to its very end of the Earth. Brilliant, bold, beautiful, and deliriously, wondrously Black, INFINTUM is what might happen if the Wakandan book of Genesis and the Afrofuturist book of Revelation decided to have a kid-nothing you read this year will come close to this amazing book." - Junot Diaz, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao
"This sweeping tale mirrors both the history of genre literature and the African American experience." - Publishers Weekly
"Fielder's . . . . boldly painted illustrations exhibit raw power on every page of this staggeringly ambitious epic."
- Library Journal
"With Infinitum: An Afrofuturist Tale, Tim Fielder is pushing the genre forward (and inviting others to join)." - Syfy.com
"How, you may ask, can a story this vast not be 'central' to Infinitum? (How can it feel to me like nothing?) Well, because it is too vast." - Bob Levin, Comics Journal