In search of our mothers' gardens : womanist prose / by Alice Walker.

In this, her first collection of nonfiction, the author speaks out as a Black woman, writer, mother, and feminist in thirty-six pieces ranging from the personal to the political. Among the contents are essays about other writers, accounts of the civil rights movement of the 1960s and the antinuclear...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Walker, Alice, 1944-
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: San Diego : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, [1983]
Edition:First edition.
Series:Harvest book.
Subjects:
Table of Contents:
  • Saving the life that is your own: the importance of models in the artist's life
  • The Black writer and the Southern experience
  • "But yet and still the cotton gin kept on working"
  • A talk: convocation
  • Beyond the peacock: the reconstruction of Flannery O'Connor
  • The divided life of Jean Toomer
  • A writer because of, not in spite of, her children
  • "Gifts of Power: the Writings of Rebecca Jackson"
  • Zora Neale Hurston: a cautionary tale and a partisan view
  • Looking for Zora
  • The Civil Rights movement: what good was it?
  • The unglamorous but worthwhile duties of the Black revolutionary artist, or of the Black writer who simply works and writes
  • "The Almost Year"
  • Choice: a tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr
  • Coretta King: revisited
  • Choosing to stay at home: ten years after the March on Washington
  • "Good Morning, Revolution: Uncollected Writings of Social Protest"
  • Making the movies and the movies we want
  • Lulls
  • My father's country is the poor
  • Recording the seasons
  • In search of our mothers' gardens
  • From an interview
  • a letter to the editor of Ms.
  • Breaking chains and encouraging life
  • If the present looks like the past, what does the future look like?
  • Looking to the side, and back
  • To "The Black Scholar"
  • Brothers and sisters
  • Silver writes
  • Only justice can stop a curse
  • "Nuclear Madness: What You Can Do"
  • To the editors of Ms. magazine
  • Writing "The Color Purple"
  • "One" child of one's own: a meaningful digression within the work(s)
  • Beauty: when the other dancer is the self.