![]() ![]() Lorde’s writing has rarely been more influential - or more misunderstood.Įven more than scandal or a shoddy biographer, a writer’s sheer quotability can guarantee an uneasy afterlife. ![]() “The Selected Works of Audre Lorde,” edited and introduced by Roxane Gay, arrives at an especially interesting moment, however. “There is, for me, no difference between writing a good poem and moving into sunlight against the body of a woman I love,” she once wrote.Īny opportunity to contemplate Lorde would be a cause for celebration. She left riches: poems, essays and two genre-defining memoirs, “Zami” and “The Cancer Journals.” Her work is an estuary, a point of confluence for all identities, all aspects kept so strenuously segregated: poetry and politics, feeling and analysis, analysis and action, sexuality and the intellect. She wanted, as Angela Davis said, to “demystify the assumption that these terms cannot inhabit the same space: Black and lesbian, lesbian and mother, mother and warrior, warrior and poet.” But there was always that garland of identifiers - and not just because she couldn’t be defined by one word. ![]() “I am a Black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet doing my work, coming to ask you if you’re doing yours,” she’d sometimes say. In her public appearances, Audre Lorde famously introduced herself the same way: “I am a Black, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet.” There were occasional variations. ![]()
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