Alice Walker
"That summer marked the beginning of the realization that I
could never live happily in Africa--or anywhere else--until
I could live freely in Mississippi." - Alice
Walker Photo
right: Alice Walker, February, 2004, at Shippensburg University.
Photo by Markell De Loach of the Chambersburg Public Opinion.
Used by permission.
Major
Works
- Once: Poems
- The Third Life of Grange Copeland
- In Love and Trouble: Stories of Black Women
- Revolutionary Petunias and Other Poems
- Five Poems
- Langston Hughes: American Poet
- Meridian
- Good Night, Willie Lee, I'll See You in the Morning
- I Love Myself When I am Laughing... and Then Again
When I Am Looking Mean and Impressive (editor)
- You Can't Keep a Good Woman Down: Stories
- The Color Purple
- In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens: Womanist Prose
- Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful: Poems
- To Hell With Dying
- Living by the Word: Selected Writings
- The Temple of My Familiar
- Finding the Green Stone
- Her Blue Body Everything We Know: Earthling Poems
- Possessing the Secret of Joy
- Warrior Marks
- The Same River Twice: Honoring the Difficult
- Anything We Love Can Be Saved: A Writer's Activism
- By the Light of My Father's Smile
- The Way Forward Is With a Broken Heart
- A Long Walk to Freedom
- A Poem Traveled Down My Arm : Poems and Drawings
(2003)
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Alice Walker:
A Biography
By Andrea Beaulieu (SHS)
Alice Walker is not only an extraordinary writer but also a
strong leader in many pro-womanist campaigns. Walker’s
unique and distinguished writing style and her boldness on the
issues she tackles in her stories have elevated her to the status
of a legend in American literature. Although most people know
her for her Pulitzer Prize winning novel, The Color Purple,
Alice Walker has a diverse and interesting history and has contributed
to many activist efforts nationwide. Alice Malsenior
Walker was born on February 9, 1944, in Eatonton, Georgia. She
was born the eighth and youngest child of Minnie Tallulah Grant
Walker and Willie Lee Walker, who were poor sharecroppers. In
the summer of 1952, at the age of eight, Alice was playing “cowboys
and Indians with her brothers when she was accidentally shot
in her right eye by a BB gun pellet. This accident left her
permanently blinded in that eye. Afterwards she felt ugly and
her confidence began to fade. One source says that she became
shy and introverted, and spent a great deal more time reading
and being alone.” As a result, she began to observe others
and their relationships, and she found that she liked to write.
When she was fourteen, one of her brothers paid to have the
“cataract” removed from her eye. While the surgery
did not return the vision in her one eye, it did help restore
her confidence (Alice Walker. About.com).
Walker graduated from high school in 1961. She was valedictorian
of her class and was voted prom queen. She decided to attend
Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia, where she was able to secure
a scholarship awarded by the Georgia Department of Rehabilitation
to physically challenged students in combination with an academic
scholarship. While at Spelman, she had the opportunity to get
involved in causes that she believed in, which she still supports
to this day. At the end of her freshman year in 1962, Walker
was invited to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s home in recognition
of her being invited to attend the Youth World Peace Festival
in Helsinki, Finland. In August of 1963, she traveled to Washington,
D.C., for the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom. From
a tree limb afar, she was able to hear Dr. King’s “
I Have A Dream” address (Jackson).
Walker received a scholarship to Sarah Lawrence College in
Bronxville, New York, prior to beginning her junior year of
college. As a result, she opted to finish her junior and senior
year at Sarah Lawrence, where she graduated in 1965 with a Bachelor
of Arts degree (Jokinen). During her junior year, she traveled
to Africa and Europe, which sparked her interest in traveling
abroad. However, in her senior year of college, Walker discovered
that she was pregnant. During this time she considered committing
suicide and wrote volumes of poetry to help herself deal with
her feelings and worst fears. With the help of a friend, she
had a safe abortion. When she was only twenty-one years old,
Walker’s mentor, Muriel Ruykeyser, sent a short story
of Alice’s titled “To Hell With Dying” to
a publisher, where it was published shortly thereafter (Jackson).
Alice
Walker is and has been a strong and outspoken activist on a
variety of issues. After graduation from Sarah Lawrence, Alice
returned to Georgia to participate in the Civil Rights movement
by carrying out door-to-door voters’ registration among
the rural poor. Then, in the fall of 1965, she moved to New
York City where she worked in the city’s Welfare Department.
The next year she moved to Jackson, Mississippi, where
she volunteered for voter registration drives and Head Start
programs. While there, she met and instantly fell in love with
a young white Jewish law student named Mel Leventhal, who was
working for the Civil Rights Movement in Mississippi.
She then returned to New York City with him so that he could
finish up law school. They ended up getting married in March
of 1967 (Alice Walker” ; Jackson). Soon
after being married, the couple returned to Mississippi where
Mel pursued civil rights court cases. They received many threats
of physical violence because of their inter-racial marriage,
which was illegal at that time in Mississippi. Alice began work
as a black history teacher for the local Head Start program,
and soon after became pregnant. However, after she heard of
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s death, she could not contain
her grieving, and she lost her unborn child.
In 1968 she accepted a teaching position at Jackson State University
in Jackson, Mississippi. That same year, her first volume
of poetry, titled Once, was published. The following
year (1969) Alice Walker finally finished her first novel, The
Third Life of Grange Copeland,
which was published in 1970. In 1969 she also gave birth to
a daughter, Rebecca
Walker, who has now also written a memoir
(see book cover left). Rebecca was born three days after Walker
finished The Third Life of Grange Copeland. That
same year, Walker was appointed writer-in-residence at Tougaloo
College in Tougaloo, Mississippi.
Alice Walker's difficult home life in Mississippi resulted
in depression. Her book Meridian is set during
this period of time. As a result, she and her daughter
moved to Massachusetts in 1972 where she accepted a teaching
position at Wellesley College and later on at the University
of Massachusetts at Boston (Alice Walker” About.com).
There she began one of the first women’s studies courses
in the nation on women’s literature.
Continuing to write, in 1973, Alice published her first collection
of short stories, In Love and Trouble: Stories of Black
Women, and her second volume of poetry, Revolutionary
Petunias and Other Poems (Jackson). The following year,
she, along with her husband and daughter Rebecca, moved back
to New York where she became an editor for Ms.
magazine. Her second novel, Meridian, was published
in 1976. That same year, Alice and her husband, Mel, were divorced.
Alice accepted a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1978 to concentrate
full-time on her writing and moved to San Francisco, California.
There she met and fell in love with Robert Allen, editor of
The Black Scholar Magazine. They moved to a country
home in Mendocino, California, where she still lives today (Jackson).
Her writing began to flourish, and in 1982, she completed
The Color Purple, for which she received the 1983
Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award. That same year,
her book, In Search of Our Mother’s Garden,
was published, containing essays on her womanist ideology.
Alice Walker had an active role in the making of the movie
based on her book The Color Purple. The movie
was produced by Quincy Jones and directed by Steven Spielberg
(Jackson), and received eleven Academy Award nominations. Her
sister, Ruth, also began The Color Purple Foundation, which
does charitable work for education (Jackson). In 1984, Alice
co-founded the Wild Trees Press publishing company out of Novarro,
California (Alice Walker, Africana.com). Over
the next several years, many of Alice’s works were published.
In 1984, her third volume of poetry was published, titled Horses
Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful. Her second book
of essays, Living By the Word, followed in 1988.
The Temple of My Familiar was released the next
year. Her volume of poetry, Her Blue Body Everything
We Know: Earthling Poems, as well as her children’s
story, Finding the Green Stone, were published
in 1991.
Alice Walker’s fifth novel, Possessing the Secret
of Joy, in 1992, recorded the psychic trauma of one
woman’s life after forced genital mutilation. Her
interest in this subject matter led her to join forces with
filmmaker Pratibha Parmar in 1993 to produce a documentary about
the defacement of women’s bodies. She wrote about her
experiences with the documentary and her feelings toward this
subject in Warrior Marks. In 1996 Alice
published The Same River Twice: Honoring the Difficult.
It describes through essays and journal entries, the loss of
her mother, the break up of her thirteen-year relationship with
Robert Allen, her struggle with lyme disease and depression,
her awakening to bi-sexuality, and notes of remembrance on the
making of the movie, The
Color Purple. The next year, Anything We Love
Can Be Saved: A Writer’s Activism, was released.
Her first work in eight years, By the Light of My Father’s
Smile, was published in September of 1998. In 2000
The Way Forward Is With a Broken Heart, which
contains a collection of autobiographical and fictional stories
about the bindings and breakings of relationships with family,
friends, and lovers, was released. Her most recent work is A
Long Walk to Freedom, which was released this year,
2001 (Campbell). Walker's daughter,
Rebecca
Walker,
has herself written her memoirs in a book called Black
White and Jewish.
Alice Walker has received numerous awards and honors. Her most
distinguished award is the Pulitzer Prize for literature for
The Color Purple. Her other awards include the
Lillian Smith Award, a National Endowment for the Arts grant
and fellowship, a Radcliffe Institute fellowship, an honorary
Ph.D. from Russell Sage College, the National Book Award, the
Rosenthal Award, the Front Page Award, a Guggenheim fellowship,
a Merrill fellowship, the Townsend Prize, the Lyndhurst Prize,
the O’Henry Award, and many others ( Jokinen).
Alice
Walker is a legendary writer and outspoken liberal political
activist. She has spoken out for civil rights, against apartheid
movement, against nuclear arms, against the United States'
treatment of Cuba, and against female genital mutilation . Although
some of her works have received criticism for their harsh portrayals
of African-American men, she has continued to confront many
conflicts facing African-American lifestyles and has continued
to support womanist values. Her commitment to important causes,
coupled with her talent as gifted writer, has placed her among
a small elite group of legendary authors of our time.
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Timeline
1944: Born in Eatonton, Georgia, the youngest
of eight children
1952: Accidentally shot and blinded in right
eye by her brother by a BB gun pellet
1961: Graduates from high school as valedictorian
and receives scholarship to Spelman College
1963: Transfers to Sarah Lawrence College
in New York; has an abortion, which leads to severe depression
1965: Graduated from Sarah Lawrence; works
in voting registration drives in Georgia; works for New York
City's Welfare Department
1966: Moves to Mississippi
to register voters and help fight civil rights campaigns
1967: Marries Mel Leventhal, a white
civil rights lawyer (see photo below), and they become the first
interracial marriage in Jackson, Mississippi, at the
time
1968: Publishes first book, Once,
a volume of poetry
1970: Publishes first novel, The
Third Life of Grange Copeland; Gives birth to daughter,
Rebecca
1972: Accepts teaching position at Wellesley
College and begins first women's studies courses
1973: Becomes editor at Ms.
magazine
1976: Publishes second novel, Meridian;
divorces husband Mel Leventhal and moves to California
1978: Falls in love with Robert Allen, which
begins a thirteen-year relationship
1982: Release of The Color Purple,
which receives the Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award
1984: Co-founds the Wild Tree Publishing
Company out of Navarro, California
1985: The film version of The Color
Purple by Steven Speilberg and Quincy Jones is released
1992: Fifth novel, Possessing the
Secret of Joy, is published
1993: Teams up with Pratibha Parmar to create
a documentary on female subject matter, titled Warrior
Marks
2001: A Long Walk to Freedom is
released.
2003: A Poem Traveled Down My Arm : Poems and Drawings
is published.
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A Review of The
Color Purple
by Andrea Beaulieu (SHS)
The novel The Color Purple by Alice Walker is
a wonderful account of a young women’s journey thorough
life. One reviewer, Gloria Rose says, “The Color
Purple is a story about growth, endurance, loyalty,
solidarity, and joy-- all nurtured by the strength of love.”
The novel's ending leaves the reader with a peaceful sigh and
causes him or her to evaluate and question even his own life.
The novel is somewhat difficult to read and offers few specific
details for the setting and characters. However, the reader
soon learns from clues in the passage that it begins when the
narrator, Celie, is only fourteen. As the novel develops, it
is clear that the time span of the novel is about thirty or
forty years. It begins with people traveling in wagons, and
towards the end, people are driving cars. Also, it is hard to
realize the large time gap between different letters, which
is sometimes as long as five years.
The story begins and continues throughout the novel, with a
letter to God written by Celie. At first, she informs us that
her mother’s health is fading and her own father has raped
her. This striking and bold beginning lets us know that Celie’s
life is anything but ordinary. She doesn’t have anyone
to talk to about her troubles, and therefore, she writes to
God as if He were her best friend. Later in the novel, Celie
writes to her sister, Nettie, rather than God. The letters are
written in what is referred to as black folk language. This
dialect reveals the small amount of education that Celie has
received. She writes the letters as she thinks, which helps
the reader to see life through her eyes and gives an intimate
view into her life. He or she witnesses through her letters
her amazing growth as a woman, who becomes a whole new person
inside and out. She learns to love herself and to share love
with others.
Celie, the character who writes the letters, is a young girl
from Georgia who thinks of herself as an ugly and poor, black
woman with little self worth, which she acknowledges time and
time again. As the novel progresses, the reader gets to follow
Celie as she begins to develop an understanding of life and
love. Her father marries her off to a man whom she refers to
as Mr.______, who is left with many children from his previous
marriages. Celie leaves home to take care of the man’s
children. However, she does not love Mr.______ and stays in
the abusive marriage for many years. It is her husband's lover,
Shug Avery, a famous female blues singer, that “gives
Celie the courage to ask for more—to laugh, to play, and
finally—to love”, as stated on the cover of the
book. Shug and the inspiration from Nettie transform Celie into
a whole new person and help Celie to learn to be happy with
herself and others. To emphasize, Gloria Rose adds, “…one
of the central focuses of the book is on Celie’s mental
and emotional rebirth. Hate and violence have almost killed
Celie, but then she meets Shug, a woman who is able to kindle
feelings of sexual love and self-love within Celie—for
the first time… The strength of these women, and their
caring for one another, offer opportunities for all three of
them to continue growing—despite the racist, sexist world
they live in.”
Although Walker has received much criticism of her portrayal
of black men in The Color Purple, the story is
told through the eyes of a black woman who felt hurt and abused
by the men to whom she is closest. The men are seen entirely
from the point of view of women and are therefore described
as cruel and full of rage. Such lines as “Well, you know
wherever there’s a man, there’s trouble” and
“A girl child ain’t safe in a family of men”
(Pinckney) explain Celie’s view of men. Her scarring early
childhood plays a large role in her discrimination.
I enjoyed reading the book very much. It helped me to understand
life through a totally different viewpoint. Although I have
not experienced much of what Celie has experienced, I still
feel like I have lived through the joy and success along with
her. To see Celie develop into a successful and happy woman
is inspiring to me. I think it is a great portrayal of African
American women’s suffering and the development of one’s
self. The bonds created by the women show how they can help
each other and, in turn, strengthen themselves.
I recommend this classic novel to anyone who enjoys reading
about women’s victories and seeing the strength they develop
to overcome obstacles in life. However, the novel does contain
details of Celie’s sexual experiences and her discovery
of parts of her body. It also includes some same sex relations
between Celie and Shug, which may be offensive to some people.
Additionally, the novel also contains rape and violent behavior
by some of the men. Despite the gruesome parts, the novel as
a whole is a great pathway into the thoughts and feelings of
an African American woman who has a very eventful and interesting
life. Barbara T. Christian announced in Black Literature
Criticism, “[The Color Purple] especially
affirms that the most abused of the abused can transform herself.
It completes the cycle Walker announced a decade ago: the survival
and liberation of black women through the strength and wisdom
of others.” The Color Purple received the
Pulitzer Prize and the American Book Award for Fiction, and
it certainly deserved them both.
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Related
Websites
Anniina's
Alice Walker Page includes a short biography and lots of
links! About.com
provides a wonderful and detailed biography of Walker.
Various
links to info about Walker can be found here.
Living
by Grace is a fun web site that contains music, writing,
influences, fun facts, an extensive biography, and other interesting
information.
Purchase
books by Alice Walker at Amazon.com. Each book site contains
readers’ and critics’ reviews on the books.
An
authentic letter from Alice Walker to President Bill Clinton
about her feelings on many issues that President Clinton has
supported or decisions he has made.
Duncan
Campbell provides excellent interview with Alice
Walker on her new book, A Long Walk to Freedom,
and also her early life and civil rights journey.
DateHookup.com
has useful information about Alice Walker. RETURN
TO TOP OF PAGE
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Bibliography
“Alice Walker.” About.com.
17 April 2001.
“Alice Walker.” Africana.com. <http://www.africana.com/tt_132.htm>
(17 April 2001).
“Alice Walker.” Black Voices.com.
<http://www.blackvoices.com/feature/bhm_00/pillars/085_Alice_Walker.html>
(26 March 2001).
“Alice
Walker.” Literature Online. Longman Publishers. (25 March
2001).
Campbell, Duncan. "A Long Walk to Freedom." Guardian Unlimited.
<http://www.observer.co.uk/review/story/0,6903,442502,00.html>
(17 April 2001).
Draper, James P., ed. Black Literature Criticism. Vol
3. Detroit: Gale, 1992.
Jackson, Melinda L. “Alice Walker-Womanist Writer.”
<http://wwwvms.utexas.edu/~melindaj/alice.html>
(26 March 2001).
Jokinen, Anniina. “Anniina’s Alice Walker Page.”
<http://www.luminarium.org/contemporary/alicew/>
(26 March 2001).
Pinckney, Darryl. “Black Victims, Black Villains.”
The New York Review of Books 34.1 (1987) 17-20. Rpt.
in Contemporary Literary Criticism. Eds. Daniel G. Marowski
and Roger Matuz. Vol 46. Detroit: Gale, 1988. 431-432.
Price, Deb. “Alice Through The Looking Glass.”
The Detroit News.
<http://det.news.com/menu/stories/38029.htm>
(19 April 2001).
Rose, Gloria. Cliffs Notes on Walker’s The Color Purple.
Ed. Gary Carey. Nebraska: Cliffs Notes, 1986.
Schmitt, Deborah A., ed. Contemporary Literary Criticism.
Vol 103. Detroit: Gale, 1998. 355.
Walker, Alice. The Color Purple. New York: Simon and
Schuster, 1982.
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