Alice Malsenior Walker is an African-American author and feminist
whose most famous novel, The Color Purple, won both the Pulitzer
Prize and the American Book Award.
Outspoken
reputation
Walker's writings include novels, stories, essays and poems. They
focus on the struggles of African Americans, particularly women,
and they witness against societies that are racist, sexist, and
violent. Her writings tend to emphasize black women's prominence
in culture and history. She is also of Cherokee and Celtic descent.
Walker
is respected on the left for her liberal attitude and for supporting
unpopular views as a matter of principle. She is openly bisexual,
and sympathetic of people of all sexualities, ethnicities, and
races.
Biography
Walker was born in Eatonton, Georgia, the United States. She attended
Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia and graduated in 1965 from
Sarah Lawrence College in Yonkers (Bronxville postal zone), New
York. Her first book of poetry was written while she was still
a senior at Sarah Lawrence. She returned to the South to work
in the U.S. civil rights movement.
Walker
was also an editor for Ms. Magazine. An article she published
in 1975 was largely responsible for the renewal of interest in
the work of Zora Neale Hurston. Two years earlier Walker, along
with fellow Hurston scholar Charlotte D. Hunt, discovered Hurston's
unmarked grave in Ft. Pierce, FL. Both women paid for a modest
headstone for the gravesite.
She
won the 1986 O. Henry Award for her short story "Kindred
Spirits", published in Esquire magazine in August of 2004.
A
political activist (due in part to the influence of Howard Zinn),
she is active in environmental, feminist, civil rights, and animal
rights causes. She has advocated ending the decades-long embargo
against Cuba. She was previously married to Mel Leventhal from
1967 to 1976, with whom she had a daughter, Rebecca Walker (also
a prominent activist and writer).
During
her youth, an incident left Alice partially blind. Her brothers
were given types of guns to play with (her mother enjoyed cowboy
movies playing at the time). Alice was not given a gun because
she was a girl. Her brother "accidentally" shot Alice
in the eye. Her parents referred to her injury as "Alice's
accident". She speaks of this incident in her documentary
turned book, "Warrior Marks" (a chronicle of female
genital mutilation in Africa), and uses it to illustrate the sacrificial
marks woman bear that allow them to be "warriors" against
female suppression.
Walker
has also chronicled her struggle with Lyme disease in The Same
River Twice: Honoring the Difficult (1996).
Controversy
In the updated 1995 introduction to his novel Oxherding Tale,
Charles Johnson engendered a political firestorm when he seemed
to criticize Walker's The Color Purple for its negative portrayal
of African-American males: "I leave it to readers to decide
which book pushes harder at the boundaries of convention, and
inhabits most confidently the space where fiction and philosophy
meet." Such candor and criticism came as a shock to some
in Academia, who felt Johnson violated an unspoken taboo against
criticizing another writer of color. The novel had come under
criticism for the same reasons earlier.
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