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Zami Sister Outsider Undersong book cover
Zami Sister Outsider Undersong
1993
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This exclusive edition brings together a selection of Audre Lorde's poetry and essays with "biomythography," the form that she created in A new Spelling of My Name (1982). Zami combines the narrative power of biography, mythology, and history as it records Lorde's experiences as a West Indian in America and the browth of her emotional and sexual resonance with women. Lorde tackles the complexities of her multiple identities in Sister Outsider (1984). It includes essays such as the often-anthologized "Uses of the The Erotic as Power" and "Poetry is Not a Luxury," in which she declares that poetry is "a vital necessity of our existence." Published just months before her death, Chosen Poems Old and New (1992) covers 30 years of Lorde's poetry. Here she demonstrates her mastery of the love poem, but writes with equal passion and eloquence about everything from a simple conversation to the devastation of drug addiction to her identity as a black woman.
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Author

Audre Lorde
Audre Lorde
Author · 33 books

Audre Lorde was a revolutionary Black feminist. Lorde's poetry was published very regularly during the 1960s—in Langston Hughes' 1962 New Negro Poets, USA; in several foreign anthologies; and in black literary magazines. During this time, she was politically active in civil rights, anti-war, and feminist movements. Her first volume of poetry, The First Cities (1968), was published by the Poet's Press and edited by Diane di Prima, a former classmate and friend from Hunter College High School. Dudley Randall, a poet and critic, asserted in his review of the book that Lorde "does not wave a black flag, but her blackness is there, implicit, in the bone." Her second volume, Cables to Rage (1970), which was mainly written during her tenure at Tougaloo College in Mississippi, addressed themes of love, betrayal, childbirth and the complexities of raising children. It is particularly noteworthy for the poem "Martha", in which Lorde poetically confirms her homosexuality: "[W]e shall love each other here if ever at all." Later books continued her political aims in lesbian and gay rights, and feminism. In 1980, together with Barbara Smith and Cherríe Moraga, she co-founded Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, the first U.S. publisher for women of colour. Lorde was State Poet of New York from 1991 to 1992. Read More

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