My City Need Something: Portraits and Prose For Black Existence

9781945335501_MyCityNeedSomething_FC.jpg
9781945335501_MyCityNeedSomething_FC.jpg

My City Need Something: Portraits and Prose For Black Existence

$18.00

Christopher R. Rogers & Karim Brown

Art & Culture / Black Liberation

Forthcoming, ships February 2026

I don’t know what’s going on / But I know that something’s wrong.

Moving between word and image, the call-and-response collaboration between writer Christopher R. Rogers and photographer Karim Brown improvises a contemporary portrait of present-day Black Philadelphia, replete with the unfinished activism present since the transnational upsurge of the George Floyd Uprising.

And I know that lately / My city has been crazy.

Arriving five years after the crucible of that period, this experimental essay-as-LP challenges Black Philadelphians to prioritize the urgency of reckoning with our own hang-ups and half-steps and to reground ourselves within the daily, prefigurative life-work of rehearsing Black liberation. This is a hyperlocal, future-forward recommitment to ongoing principled struggle and a hopeful model of contemporary self-criticism.

And I don’t know what it is but my city need something / I swear we need something different but I don’t know what it is.

The title takes its inspiration from the late, beloved Uptown Philadelphia rapper PnB Rock, whose successful mixtape single “My City Need Something” challenged us all to strive for clarity in a ubiquitously-consumed, and altogether presumed, Black suffering in a city resplendent with Black joy.

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Product Details

ISBN: 9781945335501
Published: February 3, 2026
Format: Paperback
Size: 5 x 7 in
Page count: 112

  • My City Need Something is a historiography of a Black Existence that blooms with the care and criticism of its poetry and photography. Full of Rogers' beautiful odes and missives on everyone from Nathaniel Mackey and Lorraine Hansberry to Rakim "PnB" Allen and Tina Campt, and set alongside karim brown's loving glimpses of city life, this book tugs hard at the drawstrings of its sweatsuit and keeps the reader tight and ready, exactly where we want to be.” —Anne Ishii, writer and musician based in Philadelphia and New York, and the program director of United States Artists