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Cynthia Sharp |
Reviewed by Cynthia Sharp
Abstract
An original review of
American activist poet Audre Lorde’s early work From a
Land Where Other People Live with an analysis of how her poetic style
illumines her themes of anti-racism and heartbreak. The paper explores how the
poet’s skilled use of devices like diction and contrast evoke emotion with a
careful study of “Who Said It Was Simple,” a key poem in the
collection.
Article
First
published in 1973, Audre Lorde’s From a Land Where Other People Live
from Broadside Press was a finalist for the 1974 National Book Awards for
Poetry, arguably her most powerful verse.
Lorde is one of my all time favourite writers for her wisdom and vision cast
within a spellbinding, imaginative scope,
uniting contrast in possibility. Even in their most painful epiphanies,
personally and politically, her poems leave readers with a ray of optimism.
“Movement Song,” addresses the heartache of pinpointing where a relationship
ends, “moving away from me into tomorrows,” away from union with a dream of
chosen love filled with “wish and ripen,” to
“blood and bone” of a relationship not working, quickly dissipating to separate
paths, yet ends on “morning,” a near homonym for “mourning,” but also the start
of a new day. Lorde continues to explore and feel closed doors through the eyes
of her young son in poems like “As I Grow up Again,” bringing the reader into
the emotional pain of the subject and narrator, yet filling us with empathy for
the importance of creating a just and compassionate society capable of
complexity. Even through her poetic memoir of the isolation of black women in
the second wave of feminism, Lorde has us yearning to reach out and receive her
promise of hope waiting in the wings, an inclusive future closer in reach each
decade, if we’re willing to advocate for it.
I
focused on the poem that struck me the most in this collection, “Who Said It
Was Simple,” a profound analysis of the hypocrisy of white feminism and a step
toward initiating anti-racism as a necessary component of later evolutions of
feminisms. Lorde begins the poem with an
acknowledgement that it’s
not simple, an opening question without a question mark, a simple truth, that
advancing from a position of solidarity in human rights in the intersection of
race, class, gender and orientation is going to take work, especially in a movement
that is only aware of sexism and
exploitation as it affects white women. Choked anger and intertwining branches
of oppression mark the first lines. “There are so many roots to the tree of
anger/ that sometimes the branches shatter/ before they bear,” the lacuna of extinguished black experience a gravity of loss in
contrast with vocal excitement of white feminists preparing to march through
American streets of the seventies.
Lorde
opens the second stanza with class privilege, “…the women rally before they
march/ discussing the problematic girls/ they hire to make them free,” the
sense of entitlement not only to service from someone with less, but an
assumption that service comes with the right to complain about people working
for them, potential agism and/or racism mixed into classism, the entire
paradigm on which patriarchal capitalism is built trickling into the structure
of the feminist movement, that those with money and time, privileged white
women, define the agenda, that it’s white freedom from patriarchal men as the
primary goal without any mirrors to its infiltration in relations between women
of different classes or colours. The feminist movement surrounding the narrator
wants for white women what white men have, what has been built on the backs of
slavery, and the narrator sits silently contemplating the irony of asking black
women to help achieve it, her dubious silence in juxtaposition to the animated
chatter from the women at the counter.
The
poem moves on to the ignorance of the women discussing their freedom in the
burger shop before the march to not notice or feel uncomfortable by the residue
of slavery in the continued oppression of blacks, a “waiting brother” giving
way to a man who can pass as white, a play on the word “waiter” and the long
wait for true equality. The paradigms of residual slavery and racism are
common, yet the feminists at the counter being served food don’t even see the
suffering and mistreatment of the workers, the structures of oppression, the
hierarchy of race within the hierarchy of class. They don’t see those they
should be in solidarity with as they carve their plan for their own equality.
Class and race privilege go unnoticed in the push for gender equity. Like the
brother in the shadows, patiently, the narrator waits, is still in the room, a
sign of hope that feminisms may open to embrace deeper equality, to move in the
direction of real liberation for all.
The
middle stanza ends with a return to the narrator looking inward. “I who am bound by my mirror as well as my bed…sit here
wondering/ which me will survive/ all these liberations,” the irony of diction
like “survive” next to “liberations,” both a hint of hope that she intends to
survive the racism and classism in the feminism around her, along with a solemn
recognition of her invisibility in the program, the paradox of being black,
seen and unseen on others’ terms, a profound and powerful finish to a testimony
of attempting to survive heteronormative white women’s liberation as a black
woman and a lesbian, this poem dealing specifically with racism, though Lorde’s
overall body of work speaks to many silences. The narrator’s observations
address the ignorance of being considered a servant class in a liberation
movement, the slavery history that’s rarely if ever acknowledged in white
feminist texts of the time, the irony of the most privileged among those who
were not white able bodied men using the same systems of oppression to liberate
only themselves, inviting everyone else along in a service role to fight for
white women’s rights with the promise if anything of a trickle down effect, assuming
the narrator’s participation in a subservient manner,
a follower rather than an agenda setter. Patiently, the narrator waits, a sign
of hope that feminisms may open to embrace deeper equality, to continue to move
in the direction of real liberation for all, hope in the face of unjust
complexity.
Lorde
is a master of contrast with diction like “ladies” for the privileged white
women preparing to march and “waiting brother” for the agony of all the years
of residual slavery for the most black waiter in the background. Waiting…for
rights, decency, equality. Waiting, out of sight, the play on the word
“waiting” as both service and invisible decades of patience for America to
fulfill its promise of freedom and equality. She writes in an accessible way,
marking details, observing a scene, yet turns the irony of the images into a
plea for action through point of view. It’s
clean, polished work that invites readers to infer painful truths. How long has
the narrator sat wondering? How long have black feminists sat in bewilderment
pondering if there will ever be solidarity in the feminist movement for
anti-racism? If feminism will ever become a vehicle for real structural change
around racial and class oppression? Fifty years later they’re
still waiting, exhausted in the wings with the burden of teaching those who
claim to be advancing emancipation.
While the mirror in the poem is primarily a metaphor for colour, I like to treat it as a leaping off point to hold up a mirror to ourselves, as Lorde leads by quiet example, to see the ineptitude and oppression in early feminisms expecting racially oppressed women to rally for white women’s equality to white men without any regard for class privilege, or desire to see or change those injustices. We are offered a mirror to see ourselves and movements accurately and do better.
Lorde,
Audre. From A Land Where Other People Live. Detroit: Broadside
Press, 1973. Book.
***
Bio: Cynthia Sharp holds an MFA in creative writing and an Honours BA in literature. She was the WIN Vancouver 2022 Poet Laureate, one of the Pandora’s Collective 2020 Poetry Contest Judges, and the City of Richmond, British Columbia’s 2019 Writer in Residence. Her poetry, reviews and creative nonfiction have been published and broadcast internationally in journals such as CV2, Prism, Quills, Pocket Lint, The Pitkin Review and untethered. Her collections Ordinary Light and Rainforest in Russet are available in bookstores and libraries throughout the world.
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