Conversations with Audre Lorde

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Author: Joan Wylie Hall

ISBN-10: 1578066433

ISBN-13: 9781578066438

Category: American & Canadian Literature

Audre Lorde (1934-92), the author of eleven books of poetry, described herself as a "Black feminist lesbian poet warrior mother," but she added that this phrase was inadequate in capturing her full identity. The interviews in this collection portray the many additional sides of the Harlem-born author and activist. She was also a rebellious child of Caribbean parents, a mastectomy patient, a blue-collar worker, a college professor, a student of African mythology, an experimental autobiographer...

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Audre Lorde (1934-92), the author of eleven books of poetry, described herself as a "Black feminist lesbian poet warrior mother," but she added that this phrase was inadequate in capturing her full identity. The interviews in this collection portray the many additional sides of the Harlem-born author and activist. She was also a rebellious child of Caribbean parents, a mastectomy patient, a blue-collar worker, a college professor, a student of African mythology, an experimental autobiographer in her book titled Zami, a critic of imperialism, and a charismatic orator. Despite her intense engagement with the major social movements of her time, Lorde told interviewers that she was always an outsider, a position of weakness and of strength. Most of her schoolmates were white. She married a white legal-aid attorney, and after their divorce she was the partner of a white psychologist for many years. These intimate alliances with whites caused some African Americans of both genders to question the depth of her solidarity. Lorde expressed distrust of some white feminists and charged that they lacked real understanding of African American struggles. Writing proved to be her powerful weapon against injustice. Painfully aware that differences could provoke prejudice and violence, she promoted the bridging of barriers. These interviews reveal the sense of displacement that made Lorde a champion of the outcast and the forgotten—whether in New York, Mississippi, Berlin, or Soweto. Joan Wylie Hall, the author of Shirley Jackson: A Study of the Short Fiction, teaches English at the University of Mississippi. Her work has been published in the Faulkner Journal, Studies in Short Fiction, Mississippi Quarterly, and Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers.

Interview with Audre Lorde3Audre Lorde9Audre Lorde18Audre Lorde : interview26An interview with Audre Lorde45My words will be there71Interview : Audre Lorde advocates unity among women79Audre Lorde85An interview with Audre Lorde101Speaking the unspeakable : poet Audre Lorde109Poetry, nature, and childhood : an interview with Audre Lorde115An interview with Audre Lorde128Audre Lorde on her cancer illness132The law is male and white : meeting with the black author, Audre Lorde143The creative use of difference146Poetry and day-by-day experience : excerpts from a conversation on 12 June 1986 in Berlin154Audre Lorde : a radio profile158An interview with Audre Lorde164Frontiers171Breaking the barriers of silence181Above the wind : an interview with Audre Lorde184