History of Feminism
Related: About this forumADRIENNE RICH, 1929-2012 A Poet of Unswerving Vision, "Triply marginalized --woman, lesbian and Jew"
Adrienne Rich, a poet of towering reputation and towering rage, whose work distinguished by an unswerving progressive vision and a dazzling, empathic ferocity brought the oppression of women and lesbians to the forefront of poetic discourse and kept it there for nearly a half-century, died on Tuesday at her home in Santa Cruz, Calif. She was 82.
Triply marginalized as a woman, a lesbian and a Jew Ms. Rich was concerned in her poetry, and in her many essays, with identity politics long before the term was coined.
She accomplished in verse what Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique, did in prose. In describing the stifling minutiae that had defined womens lives for generations, both argued persuasively that womens disenfranchisement at the hands of men must end.
...
In 1997, in a widely reported act, Ms. Rich declined the National Medal of Arts, the United States governments highest award bestowed upon artists. In a letter to Jane Alexander, then chairwoman of the National Endowment for the Arts, which administers the award, she expressed her dismay, amid the increasingly brutal impact of racial and economic injustice, that the government had chosen to honor a few token artists while the people at large are so dishonored.
Read the full obituary at: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/29/books/adrienne-rich-feminist-poet-and-author-dies-at-82.html
Here is one poem:
Prospective Immigrants Please Note
Either you will
go through this door
or you will not go through.
If you go through
there is always risk
of remembering your name.
Things look at you doubly
and you must look back
and let them happen.
If you do not go through
it is possible
to live worthily
to maintain your attitudes
to hold your position
to die bravely
but much will blind you,
much will evade you,
at what cost who knows?
The door itself
makes no promises.
It is only a door.
http://www.poemhunter.com/poem/prospective-immigrants-please-note/
Violet_Crumble
(35,961 posts)I hadn't heard of her before, but if I liked poetry, I'd probably have liked her stuff
boston bean
(36,221 posts)I really liked the poem..... It is only a door, it makes no promises.
True in so many aspects of life.......
CreekDog
(46,192 posts)BlueIris
(29,135 posts)Telephone Ringing in the Labyrinth and Tonight No Poetry Will Serve, which are both excellent.
Her writing (essays as well as poetry) changed my life. She will be missed.
pinto
(106,886 posts)Adrienne Rich, a much-awarded feminist poet and essayist, dies at 82. She 'was a voice for the feminist movement when it was just starting and didn't have a voice,' an expert says.
Poet Adrienne Rich in May 1987. She moved from the East to the warmer climate of Santa Cruz to help her rheumatoid arthritis. On the West Coast she taught at San Jose State, Scripps College and elsewhere. (Neal Boenzi / New York Times / May 8, 1987)
By Mary Rourke, Special to the Los Angeles Times
March 28, 2012, 8:31 p.m.
Adrienne Rich, a pioneering feminist poet and essayist who challenged what she considered to be the myths of the American dream and subsequently received high literary honors, died Tuesday at her home in Santa Cruz. She was 82.
The cause was complications from the rheumatoid arthritis that had plagued her for much of her life, said a son, Pablo Conrad.
"Adrienne Rich made a very important contribution to poetry," Helen Vendler, a Harvard University professor and literary critic told The Times in 2005. "She was able to articulate a modern American conscience. She had the command of language and the imagery to express it."
Rich came of age during the social upheaval of the 1960s and '70s and was best known as an advocate of women's rights, which she explored in poetry and prose. But she also passionately addressed the antiwar movement and wrote of the marginalized and underprivileged.
http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-adrienne-rich-20120329,0,4258797.story
Ms. Toad
(34,072 posts)We are all such complex creatures, neither wholly good nor wholly evil. As I learned teaching in an all black high school, where a favorite "game" was to draw swastikas on papers turned in to my fellow teacher who had spent time in a concentration camp, sometimes rather than uniting we "others" find someone more an "other" than ourselves to marginalize. Adrienne Rich was not only marginalized, her "others" were people like my dearest friend who is a transwoman.
So, from some trans friends:
http://rafeposey.wordpress.com/2012/03/29/my-complicated-mourning-rip-adrienne-rich/
and another:
http://gudbuytjane.wordpress.com/2012/03/29/my-complicated-mourning-of-adrienne-rich/
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)to a month of a lot of information and listening to various people on this subject.
i hope sometime we are able to discuss it. from what i am reading this has a very strong place in the feminist movements history.