Audre Lorde Project

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    Important Woman Project Biography Audre Lorde was born Audrey Geraldine Lorde in February of 1934 in New York. She was the child of Caribbean immigrants. Lorde attended both Hunter College and Columbia University, both located in New York. She began publishing her works in 1968, a volume of poetry called First Cities. Throughout her life, she was a poet, author, feminist, and civil rights activist. Most of her works explored the concept of being a black woman in this society; therefore her literature

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    transgender women and drag queens from larger movements despite their significance to those groups. Much of Rivera’s activism focused on the inclusion and protection of transgender people, and that legacy continues today. For example, the Sylvia Rivera Law Project, an organization that provides legal help to non-cisgender people of color, is named in her honor and fights for many of the same causes that Sylvia herself did. Sylvia, along with her friend and fellow activist Marsha P. Johnson, formed the organization

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    Personal Reflection

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    It won’t always be easy, but it will always be worth it. These wise words are from my favorite teacher, my academic team coach, and an all-around great woman. At some point, without my realizing that it had happened, these words crept in and became my mantra. I worked hard to get where I am, and I’ll continue working hard, not because it is easy, but because I know that I will be better for it. My life mission is to learn and experience as much as I possibly can. I am overwhelmed by the concept

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    Highly personal, Sister Outsider reflects how Audre Lorde’s deals with the many faces of systematic oppression, in order to become whole. Written throughout the lifespan of her life, what Audre Lorde has written was not just for herself but rather for other women who can and do relate to her and the struggles that she faced. Lorde bases a lot of her writings on who she is: a black woman, lesbian identified woman, a feminist, and mother of two; and what she had experienced throughout her life. She

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    How does the difference between the way Dee (Wangero) and Maggie would use the quilts represent their two different ways of defining and treating their family’s heritage? Does the narrative give approval to Dee’s way or Maggie ’s? The idea of heritage is very different from one person to another. The story of “Everyday Use” shows a dynamic picture of two sisters that see their family history and upbringing nearly opposite points of view. The quilts become the catalyst for a cultural battle between

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    Audre Lorde Essay

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    Audre Lorde In our class discussions and reading, I learned that women were once in charge of the human race, women were a part of a community, no race was inferior or superior, there was peace and harmony in the world until the patriarchal era came, planning to embed itself in the ground for a long time. Women were raped of their identity, their race and their status in society. Men ruled the biblical stories, leaving Mary out. Hence, the war started between the races, women fought to gain their

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    The poem “Hanging Fire” by Audre Lorde uses themes such as self-loathing, sexism, parental neglect, and dejection to tell the story of a fourteen-year-old-girl. The narrator feels lonely, unequal, ugly, and dejected throughout the poem. By using these themes, Lorde gives insight into what’s going through the girl’s mind as the day passes. Throughout the poem the narrator constantly talks about how she doesn’t like certain things about her appearance. Such as in the second line when she says, “

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    Brown, Makalynn SR “The Fourth of July” Background The author of “The Fourth of July”, Audre Lorde, is a poet from New York. Being born from African and Caribbean parents, she experienced a lot of hardships growing up. Lorde writes most of her books from personal experience while growing up. She graduated from Hunter College in 1951 and Columbia University ten years later. After graduating she taught a lot around the New York area and also spent her time traveling to different countries

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    emotionally and freely. Lorde says that poetry is to killing yourself as rhetoric is to killing your children. The first lines of the poem is Lorde calling the readers to action, and telling them to put their children first. Feeling fury over the case against Thomas Shea, in the first stanza, in the first four lines of the poem, Lorde tells us that it doesn’t matter the crime or the race, children must come before hatred. She emphasizes on this in the next stanza. In the second stanza, Lorde paints the streets

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    and sexism. Poets give readers a manner in which they can release their feelings, an opportunity not readily available in everyday life. To establish this crucial connection, poets identify certain aspects of themselves through their writings. Audre Lorde continuously brings up her background as being a lesbian and black because it makes important contributions to her essays and poems. These aspects bring comfort to readers who are desperately searching for a piece of themselves in poems.

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