Sunday 5 December 2021

Summary of In Search of Our Mother’s Garden

 BOOK TITLE: In Search of Our Mother’s Garden

AUTHOR: Alice Walker

AUTHOR HISTORY:

Born in Eatonton, Georgia on February 9th of 1944, Alice Malsenior Walker is a Black American novelist, essayist, poet and activist. She is most famous for her novel, The Color Purple, which was adapted into a film by Steven Spielberg in 1985. Her parents, Willie Lee Walker and Minnie Tallulah Grant were sharecroppers and had eight children, Alice being the youngest. She began school at 4-years-old, attending East Putnam Consolidated. In her teenage years, she attended the only high school available to Black youth, Butler Baker High School. She graduated as the valedictorian and enrolled in Spelman College after being awarded a full scholarship by the state of Georgia in honor of her academic achievements. She transferred to Sarah Lawrence College in New York after receiving a scholarship offer and used her time there to study abroad in East Africa. She began writing the poems that would eventually be compiled into her first book of poetry during this time as well. After graduating college in 1965, she worked as an educator and social worker, remaining heavily involved in Civil Rights efforts. Her expansive writing career also includes Temple of My Familiar, Possessing the Secret of Joy and Meridian, amongst others.

BOOK HISTORY:

In Search of Our Mother’s Garden: Womanist Prose was published in 1983 and as a collection of 36 essays written by Walker. The essays were a dynamic array of articles, reviews, speeches and other forms of prose written on various topics, using Walker’s womanist lens. She uses the pages of the text to explore the most pressing issues including the Civil Rights Movement of 1960s, anti-semitism, childhood and motherhood.

In Search Of Our Mother’s Garden: Womanist Prose is a collection of 36 essays, divided into four parts. As you explore this text, it is important that you take the time to consider the learning points of each chapter. Use the discussion questions to further interrogate the reading and expand your understanding of womanist concepts and ideologies.

Part 1

The opening section of Walker’s In Search of Our Mother’s Garden: Womanist Prose sets the pace for the overall thematic progression of the novel. The introductory essays found in the first section explore Walker’s relationship with Zora Neal Hurston’s work and Walker’s personal relationship with the Black southern landscape. These relationships encourage her to seek out the stories of Southern Black folks who have been forgotten and/or shunned throughout the course of history. She looks to Hurston as a beloved ancestor and travels to her hometown of Eatonville, Florida to uncover more of her work and personal history. "Saving the Life That Is Your Own: The Importance of Models in the Artist's Life" The first essay explores the artist’s need for models (understood to be role models; inspiration) and the difficulty of finding them. She begins this essay with a brief discussion of a quote found in a letter from Vincent Van Gogh to his friend, Emile Bernard. Written from a mental institution near the end of his life, Van Gogh wrote that he is “suffering from an absolute lack of models”. Walker interprets this as evidence of how serious Van Gogh took his art and subsequently, a commentary on the importance of having models for your work.

"The Black Writer and the Southern Experience"

In this essay, Walker continues the story she alluded to in the first essay. She begins with detailing her mother’s humiliation at a flour distribution center in the small Georgia town where they lived. Because her mother had dressed up to exchange vouchers for flour, the official—a white woman— refused to serve her, stating that she looked too prosperous to be on social welfare. Walker sees the story as an ultimately triumphant one, for the reason that her mother was able to lean on others in her community for flour: “In this small story is revealed the condition and strength of a people”.

Walker further states that this sense of community is an inheritance of the black Southern writer. Recalling her own rural Southern childhood, she writes that she is not nostalgic for poverty —her parents were sharecroppers—but for the sense of community and the closeness to the earth that her childhood nurtured in her. She recalls a “white Northern professor” suggesting to her that her childhood was not an adequate one for becoming a poet, and she refuted him for it.

• Walker’s mother is humiliated during a trip into town for flour, due to the clothing she decided to wear. She is ridiculed and turned away with the white woman saying that, “Anybody dressed up as good as you don’t need to come here begging for food.”

"But Yet and Still the Cotton Gin Kept on Working…"

This essay concerns Walker’s experience teaching at the Headstart Friends of the Children of Mississippi. This was a teacher-training program with no government funding, designed for the black children of Mississippi. Walker’s role was as a consultant and a mentor for these aspiring teachers, most of them poor and uneducated black women. In an effort to get these women to understand their own histories, so that they could then pass these histories on to the children that they taught, she had them write short testimonies about their experiences with racism in the South. The essay includes their segments from these testimonies, many of which deal with Klan violence, as well as the less organized violence of bigoted townspeople.

"A Talk: Convocation 1972"

“A Talk: Convocation” is a transcript of a graduation speech that Walker delivered at Sarah Lawrence College, her New York based alma mater. The speech, directed at young women and giving specific attention to young Black women, urges them to believe in themselves and to learn to face prejudice head on. Walker recalls her time editing the memoir of Mrs. Winston Hudson (detailed in the essay “‘But Yet and Still the Cotton Gin Kept on Working…’”) and cites Hudson’s own struggles with racism. She suggests that racism remains a problem even at a progressive college such as Sarah Lawrence and notes the scarcity of Black writers on the reading curriculum saying, “I am discouraged when a faculty member at Sarah Lawrence says there is not enough literature by black women and men to make a full year’s course […] It is shocking to hear that the only black woman writer white and black academicians have heard of is Gwendolyn Brooks”.

She does however go on to praise three formative teachers that she had while a student at Sarah Lawrence: her philosophy professor Helen Merrell Lynd, and the two poets and literature professors Muriel Rukeyser and Jane Cooper. She states that she learned from Lynd that even sadness and loneliness “have their use”; that Rukeyser taught her how to live bravely; and that Cooper taught her the value of listening and patience. She ends her speech by reading two original poems, entitled “Be Nobody’s Darling” and “Reassurance.”

• Black women’s experiences in higher education are often saturated with instances of violence on the basis of misogynoir, even when the institution hails itself as “progressive” and modern. In this case, how is progressivism used not only to mask, but to promote race and gender based violence and oppression in academia, work spaces or societally?

"Beyond the Peacock: The Reconstruction of Flannery O'Connor"

In this essay, Walker returns to her childhood home after becoming ill with lupus. Accompanied by her mother, the women decide to visit the Georgia house of Flannery O’Connor, one of her favorite writers. O’Connor’s home is not far from Walker’s own childhood home, which is now in a state of neglect and abandonment. Walker contrasts her old house with the tended state of O’Connor’s empty house saying,

“What I feel at the moment of knocking is fury that someone is paid to take care of her house, though no one lives in it, and that her house still, in fact, stands, while mine—which of course we never owned anyway—is slowly rotting into dust”.

 "The Divided Life of Jean Toomer"

This essay considers the writer Jean Toomer through a review of his collected writings, The Wayward and the Seeking. Many of these writings are autobiographical, and through them Walker comes to understand Toomer as a racial opportunist, embracing his blackness when it was convenient for him to do so and renouncing it when it became a burden. Toomer came from a mixed-race background and could generally “pass” as white. His most famous and influential novel, Cane, was concerned with the lives of Black Southerners, and in selling the book, Toomer emphasized the Black side of his own history. However, he refused to identify himself as Black when it came time to promote the book. He eventually married a wealthy white woman and moved with her to a Quaker community in rural Pennsylvania.

"A Writer Because of, Not in Spite of, Her Children"

This essay is a review of the novel Second Class Citizen by Nigerian writer Buchi Emecheta. While Walker finds the style of the novel plain and unremarkable, she considers it to be an important book for its frank and unusual depiction of the role of motherhood in the life of the female artist. The novel, which is semi-autobiographical, concerns an intellectually ambitious Nigerian woman who moves with her husband and children to London, where she must contend with open racism and sexism while raising five children. She ultimately transcends her circumstances not by pushing her children away, but rather by integrating them into her writing: she decides that she will write a novel, not for herself, but for the adults that they will become.

"Gifts of Power: The Writings of Rebecca Jackson"

This essay is a review of Jean McMahon Humez’s Gifts of Power. The book is a biography of the 19th century minister and mystic Rebecca Cox Jackson. Walker traces Jackson’s trajectory from a poor, illiterate girl in Philadelphia with an older minister brother to a spiritual leader in her own right. Jackson believed in divine visions and overcame her illiteracy by calling on the will of God to learn how to read the Bible. She later left her husband—also involved in her family’s African Methodist church—to establish a black Quaker community of her own. She lived with a younger woman, Rebecca Perot, until Perot’s death; the two may or may not have had a romantic relationship.

"Zora Neale Hurston: A Cautionary Tale and a Partisan View"

This essay is an appreciation of Zora Neale Hurston, whom Walker regards as a role model. She recalls coming upon her book ‘Of Mules and Men’ as a college student and being delighted by its portrayal of Black southerners. Hurston’s portrayal gave Walker’s own family history back to herself: “For what Zora’s book did was this: it gave [my family] back all the stories they had forgotten or of which they had grown ashamed […] and showed them how marvelous, and, indeed, priceless, they are.” Hurston is an important figure to Walker for her style and spirit, as much as for her writing. Walker notes that she was ahead of her time in her sexual independence/identity and also in her proudly African style of dress. At a time when most other Black American writers were modeling themselves on European intellectuals, Hurston was more focused on “Africa, Haiti, Jamaica, and—for a little racial diversity (Indians)—Honduras”. She frequently wore elaborate headwraps, a style that, as Walker notes, would become popular among black women in the 1960s.

Looking for Zora

In the final essay of part one, Walker travels to Eatonville, Florida- the hometown of her ‘model’, Zora Neale Hurston. She takes the trip with her friend Charlotte, a white Southern graduate who, like Walker, is interested in the literary and activist contributions of Hurston. Walker poses as the illegitimate niece and finds that while most of the townspeople remember Zora, their memories differ and often contradict each other. She is unsuccessful in her attempts to find the Hurston’s unmarked resting place, but she does leave with a renewed understanding of her roots in this all-Black community.

Part 2

Part Two consists of eleven essays and primarily focuses on the Civil Rights Movement and the various leaders within it. Through this collection of essays, she discusses the aims of the movement and describes her personal involvement while also exploring the positive and negative impacts and outcomes. She visits Hurston’s final resting place and in her honor, purchases a memorial plaque to place upon the previously unmarked site. As reverence leads much of the conversation in regards to Hurston’s literary ancestors, she also holds the Black southern landscape in high regard.

"The Civil Rights Movement: What Good Was it?"

In this essay, written when she was 23 years old, Walker defends the Civil Rights Movement against disaffected white liberals, who believe that it accomplished nothing. The central point of her essay is that the gains of the Movement are as much spiritual as they are material being that the Movement taught many black people to conceive of themselves, for the first time, as human and deserving. Walker also makes the point that Black people, unlike white people, do not have the luxury of giving up on the struggle for racial equality: “If the Civil Rights Movement is dead, and if it gave us nothing else, it gave us each other forever

"The Unglamorous but Worthwhile Duties of the Black Revolutionary Artist, or of the Black Writer

Who Simply Works and Writes"

This is a transcript of a speech that Walker presented to the Black Students’ Association at Sarah Lawrence College in 1970. She begins the speech by recalling her own time at the institution during her undergraduate years and how she appreciated the freedom she was afforded. She speaks about how she only later came to realize that her education there was one-sided. While she admired and loved many of her literature teachers there, she believes they did not expose her to enough Black writers, stating she “... began to feel that subtly and without intent or malice, I had been miseducated”

• Consider this quote:

“I have not labeled myself yet. I would like to call myself revolutionary, for I am always changing, and growing, it is hoped for the good of more black people. I do call myself black when it seems necessary to call myself anything, especially since I believe one’s work rather than one’s appearance adequately labels one.”

“The Almost Year”

This essay is a review of the novel “The Almost Year” by Florence Engel Randall. The novel itself is a combination of a ghost story and a realistic novel, concerning an underprivileged young Black woman’s year at the home of a wealthy white suburban family. While the family members are “well-intentioned”, they are of course unable to wholly connect with the girl. The girl then begins to see spirits in the family’s household, which for her, reaffirm her of her own slightly unwanted and awkward presence there. This plot twist  inspires both the girl and the family to connect with each.

Walker found the novel to be a realistically “warm” portrayal of a difficult human dynamic, and also to be “remarkably free of cant”. However, she finally understands it to be a conventional and limited effort, in that it does not push for or encourage long lasting social change, only for provisional moments of warmth between people of different social classes: “What one yearns for (and indeed must have if we are to share this earth as unashamed friends) is a […] family that is radically involved in changing society, not merely giving succor to its oppressed”.

"Choice: A tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr."

“Choice: A tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.” is the transcript of a 1972 speech that Walker delivered in a Jackson, Mississippi restaurant, which up until around that time, had refused to serve people of color. In the speech, she discusses King’s legacy and what it meant to her. The word “choice” in the speech’s title refers to what Walker sees as one of King’s greatest legacies: the fact that he made it possible for Southern black people like herself to remain in or return to the South based on their own decision. Walker states that prior to King, it was standard and practically expected for Black Southern people to leave their hometowns as they were generally driven away. Despite their attachment to the land, they were pushed away whether it be by poverty, racism, or overall heartbreak with the horrors of the American south. However, King, through his “acts” and “books,” was able to restore Black folk’s sense of connection to their land and furnished them with enough pride to claim it: “He gave us back our heritage”.

"Coretta King: Revisited"

“Coretta King: Revisited” is the title of an interview Walker held with Coretta Scott King, the widow of Martin Luther King, Jr. The interview takes place in King’s Atlanta home and is subtitled “revisited” as Walker recalls having interviewed her many years ago, prior to her husband’s assassination. She was a student at Spelman College at the time, one of a group of students who were on their way to the World Peace Festival in Helsinki, Finland. King herself was about to leave for a peace conference in Geneva.

Walker finds the older, widowed King to be more guarded and introverted than she had been, writing “The first thing I noticed was that her eyes have changed. They are reserved, almost cool, and she is tense; perhaps because she has been written about so often and because she is bored with it”.

Nevertheless, Walker still finds her to be an impressive force to be reckoned with, a beacon of light on her own terms. King remained involved in political campaigning and often sang in “Freedom concerts”. She directed the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial Center, working out of the basement of their home and aided by Mrs. Farris, King Jr’s sister. Walker and King discuss feminism, social justice, and the role of non-violence in the Movement. The disengagement of many Black women with the feminist movement frustrates Walker, and she asks King for her thoughts on this to which King replies that she can understand why Black women might not want to concentrate only on women when they feel that their entire people need saving; however, she also believes that “[t]he Black woman has a special role to play”

"Choosing to Stay at Home: Ten Years after the March on Washington"

In this essay, Walker recalls her participation, as a college student, in the March on Washington, where she heard Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. speak. She contrasts the view of him that she had in Washington, as a powerful, charismatic speaker, with an earlier impression that she had of him when she saw him speak at Atlanta University: “It was a surprise […] to find at the March on Washington that the same voice that had seemed ponderous and uninspired in a small lecture hall was now as electrifying in its tone as it was in its message”. Walker recalls how King inspired her, and other Southern Black folks like her, to return to the South and to reclaim their Southern heritage. She remembers how, growing up poor and black in Georgia, she had often felt like “an exile in [her] own town”, despite feeling an overall connection to the landscape. As a young aspiring writer, she had always most loved and admired writers whose writing showed a connection to their landscapes and nonviolence, she maintains that “[i]t is very difficult to get people beyond the point of seeing nonviolence as something you do in marches and demonstrations.

"Good Morning, Revolution: Uncollected Writings of Social Protest"

This is a review of a collection of poems by Langston Hughes, edited by Faith Berry. The poems share themes of revolution and protest, and Walker notes that Hughes was little-appreciated as a poet of social change. She discusses Hughes’s interest in communism and his visits to Russia, which he wrote about in his essay, “The Soviet Union and Color.” He felt that communism solved the problem of racism, along with other societal problems, and that Russia as a society was more advanced than the United States.

 “Making the Moves and the Movies We Want”

This is a short review of a movie titled Countdown at Kusini. The movie was produced by Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. which at the time of writing, Walker hails as, “the largest black sorority in the world”. The movie, set in Nigeria, concerns a visiting musician who joins an anti-colonial uprising. Walker finds the movie flawed in some of its casting choices, but despite that element and its difficult subject matter, a worthy and inspiring work writing, “It is basically an upbeat, joyous film, with incredible vistas of Africa […] and African ceremonies, music, and customs. One leaves the theater ready to join the next revolutionary battle, not in dejection over how much there is to be done, but in awe of the possibilities for change once an oppressed people decides to rise.”

• Walker hopes that Countdown at Kusini will prompt the women of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. to continue producing meaningful films that shift the narrative. Specifically, she is hopeful that they will create “one movie a year”. While she is mildly critical of some content, she is more so pleased with the pushback against the disparaging narrative of Black women.

"Lulls"

This is a descriptive personal essay, concerning Walker’s visit to the South (Atlanta, Georgia and Jackson, Mississippi), although she is now living in Brooklyn. The title refers to “lulls” in political activity, and Walker’s focus is on the lives of people she knows in the South: family, neighbors, teachers, and former boyfriends, and the degree to which politics has altered or not altered these lives. Many of the people to whom she talks, for example, her childhood friend Joe Harris, have themselves lived up North and disliked it to the point where they returned home. Other people, such as her daughter’s old kindergarten teacher Mrs. Cornelius, have remained in the South and seem content with their lives and their roles in the community.

 “My Father’s Country Is The Poor”

This essay concerns a trip to Cuba that Walker made as a young woman, along with a group of Black American artists. The editors of a magazine called The Black Scholar sponsored them, while the Cuban Institute for Friendship among Peoples hosted them. The essay is interspersed with segments from memoirs by Fidel Castro, Ernesto Cardenal, and Angela Davis, as well as with poems and journal entries by Walker herself.

 

 

"Recording the Season"

This is a short essay concerning the seven years that Walker and her husband spent in Jackson, Mississippi, a time that was both joyous and challenging. Walker recalls the opposition that she and her husband, a white Jewish integrationist lawyer, faced there, as a racially mixed couple. She remembers the isolation and frustration that she felt as a new mother attempting to be a writer and the estrangement that she felt both from her racist neighbors and from “the scholarly type of revolutionary” who visited her and her husband from Boston. Walker locates her depression at that time as an uncertainty about the usefulness of her fiction writing, in this contentious climate.

Part 3

Section three includes eight essays focusing on issues pertaining to Black women and the political concerns of the Black American community. She tackles issues of self-worth and respect and aims to uplift Black women and men. Walker explores her relationship with other Black women artists who have used activism and prose to fuel their creative work. She explores Black women’s relationship with their self-definition. The title essay begins this section and explores the untapped creativity of older Black women- both enslaved and descendants thereof. “The garden” is a both literal and metaphorical symbol, elaborated upon more in this essay as Walker details the life of her own mother- an accomplished gardener.

"In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens"

The title essay explores the buried and often untapped creativity of an older generation of Black women- both enslaved and descendants thereof. The “garden” in the title is to be understood in both the literal and metaphorical sense. Walker’s mother, an accomplished gardener, would often draw attention from strangers who would pause to admire the beautiful blooms in front of her home. Walker viewed her mother’s gardening as her own way of “ordering the universe,” an instinct that she believed to be alive in all Black women, but that was not allowed to be expressed by enslaved Black women. Ultimately, she believes that the Black woman artist is expressing the thwarted and misplaced dreams and imaginings of her ancestors, her silenced mother and grandmothers.

"From an Interview"

These are excerpts from a 1973 interview with Walker, in which she discusses her life, beliefs, and work. The interview opens with her discussing a difficult period in her senior year of college, during which she was both pregnant and suicidal. Her college friends found her a doctor who would perform an abortion, and this period ultimately led to the writing and eventual publication of her first book of poetry, Once. Walker states that ever since this formative period, the writing of poetry has always come for her out of a feeling of sadness and despair. Walker also talks about her political commitments, which for her are linked to her art. She states that she “believe(s) in change: change personal and change in society” and that she has “experienced a revolution (unfinished, without question, but one whose new order is everywhere on view) in the South”.

"A Letter to the Editor of Ms."

This is a letter of appreciation, regarding a meeting of the National Black Feminist Organization, which featured the politician Shirley Chisholm—the first women to run for the Democratic nomination for the President of the United States in 1972. Walker finds this gathering special both because it is enjoyable and because it is rare for her to find such consensus and community: “I realized at the National Black Feminist Organization conference that it had been much too long since I sat in a room full of black women and, unafraid of being made to feel peculiar, spoke about things that matter to me”.

"Brothers and Sisters"

In this short personal essay Walker recalls the sexism she experienced during her poor, rural, Southern upbringing; a sexism that in different ways had an impact on both her brothers and she and her sisters. She recounts how sexist traditions and ways of living ultimately influenced the paths taken by her brothers and sisters, alike.

"If the Present Looks Like the Past, What Does the Future Look Like?"

In what many may view as the most contentious letter found within the text, “If the Present Looks Like the Past, What Does the Future Look Like?” concerns itself with the issue of colorism. According to Walker, colorism is “prejudicial or preferential treatment of same-race people based solely on their color”. Walker grapples with the issue as the mother of a biracial, light-skinned daughter and because of this, searches for a remedy writing that in order for Black people to be released from the issues of colorism, they must question this white imposed “fantasy” and “cleave to reality”.

"Looking to the Side, and Back"

In “Looking to the Side, and Back”, Walker interrogates the perception that the Black community has towards Black women who are trapped in abusive relationships. She believes that this lack of empathy is a result of the pressure placed on Black women to be both strong and resilient- a pressure that is imposed both societally and internally.

• At the time of this reading, are you able to pinpoint personal negative biases towards Black women who are currently in or at some point remained in an abusive relationship?

• Consider these quotations:

“They could take the black woman as invincible, as she was portrayed to some extent in my speech (what they heard was the invincible part), but there was no sympathy for struggle that ended in defeat. Which meant there was no sympathy for struggle itself—only for ‘winning’.”

“I was reminded of something that had puzzled me about the response of black people to Movement people in the South. During the seven years I lived in Mississippi, I never knew a Movement person (and I include myself) who wasn’t damaged in some way from having to put her or his life, principles, children, on the line over long, stressful periods. And this is only natural. But there was a way in which the black community could not look at this. I remember a young boy who was shot through the neck by racist whites, and almost died. When he recovered, he was the same gentle, sweet boy he’d always been, but he hated white people, which at that time didn’t fit in with black people’s superior notion of themselves as people who could consistently turn the other cheek. Nobody ever really tried to incorporate the new reality of this boy’s life. When they spoke of him it was as if his life stopped just before the shot.”

"To The Black Scholar"

This chapter is a letter to the editors of The Black Scholar, in response to an article by Dr. Robert Staples entitled “The Myth of the Black Macho: A Response to Angry Black Feminists”. His essay was a reponse to feminist sociologist Michelle Wallace’s book, “Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwoman”. Walker ‘calls out’ Staples and deems his actions reactionary and defensive, suggesting that “instead of arguing, at once, about whether there is or is not sexism in the Black community (and how could our community possibly be different from every other in that respect),” he should look around. She continues however by pointing out that while Wallace’s book has its imperfections, they are not the misogynistic issues alluded to by Staples. Instead, Walker pinpoints that Wallace has a “deep reluctance to criticize other Black women,” along with a reductive view of the “superwoman”.

"Brothers and Sisters"

In this short personal essay Walker recalls the sexism she experienced during her poor, rural, Southern upbringing; a sexism that in different ways had an impact on both her brothers and she and her sisters. She recounts how sexist traditions and ways of living ultimately influenced the paths taken by her brothers and sisters, alike.

Part 4

Silver Writes

The title of this section is a distortion of the term “Civil Rights”, a phrase that Walker finds to be bureaucratic and incapable of fully encompassing the contours of the struggle for Black liberation. She titles her poem Silver Writes, and uses this essay to delve into the meaning of the poem which she says, “... reveals why the term ‘Civil Rights’ could never adequately express Black people’s revolutionary goals, because it could never adequately describe our longings and our dreams, or those of the non-Black people who stood among us.”

Walker also notes that “Silver Writes” is how older, southern Black folks tended to pronounce “Civil Rights” and how they “did their best to instill what accurate poetry they could into this essentially white civil servants’ term.”

Only Justice Can Stop A Curse

This short essay concerns the anti-nuclear war movement and is ultimately a call-to-action for people of color to join the movement, rather than to give in to feelings of anger and helplessness about a disaster that they had no part in creating. Walker opens the essay with a lengthy and elaborate curse that she clarifies was collected by Zora Neale Hurston, in her capacity as an anthropologist. She then states that “I am sure it was a woman who first prayed this curse” and that her curse (which involves ruined farmlands and widespread sickness) is moreover coming to pass.

• This section opens with a curse-prayer by Walker’s model, Zora Neale Hurston. After reading this introduction, consider the role of religion and prayer in the Black south and in Black liberation movements? How does this curse-prayer deal with ideals of forgiveness often found in monothesitic religions? What is the significance of Walker both validating and honouring Hurston’s anger?

Nuclear Madness: What You Can Do

This essay is a consideration of the book Nuclear Madness, by the pediatrician and anti-nuclear activist Helen Caldicott. It is also, as its subtitle suggests, a call to action, and like the previous essay it particularly focuses on people of color: “As individuals we must join others. No time to quibble about survival being a ‘white issue’.

To The Editors of Ms. Magazine

This is a letter written in response to an article by Letty Cottin Pogrebin that appeared in Ms. Magazine, entitled “Anti-Semitism in the Women’s Movement.” Walker writes that while she has always been sympathetic to Jewish people, and feels that as an African-American woman she has in common with them a keen sense of social injustice, she does not approve of Israel’s actions in Palestine; nor does she support the idea that expressing disapproval is the same thing as anti-Semitism: “[People] are against [the war on Palestine] not because they hate Jews (though some of them may) but because they recognize and condone imperialistic behavior”.

Writing The Color Purple

This is an essay about Walker’s process of writing her novel The Color Purple, a novel that ultimately won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award and was made into both a movie and a musical. Walker writes about the restlessness and the financial difficulties that she experienced in writing the novel, as well as her bereft feelings once her novel was finished and her characters had “left” her. She began writing the novel in New York City and found that her characters would not “speak” to her in New York City, nor in San Francisco once she relocated there. It was only when she found a place in rural Northern California did her characters begin to express themselves: “And no wonder: it looked a lot like the town in Georgia most of them were from, only it was more beautiful and the local swimming hole was not segregated”. Walker’s daughter, who’d been staying with her father following their divorce, came to stay with her during the writing of her book. While Walker was initially worried that her daughter’s presence would be disruptive to her already lofty writing process and to both her and her characters, her daughter proved to be a stabilizing influence instead. Her daughter’s adventures in school even come to inform the plot of the book. She then left for summer camp, and Walker finished the novel on the day that she left.

Beauty: When the Other Dancer is the Self

This is an essay about Walker’s blind right eye which was the result of a childhood accident when one of her brothers shot her with a BB gun. She uses the space to write about how she came to terms with her partial blindness, which as a child and eventually a young woman, made her feel freakish and self-conscious. In the immediate aftermath of the accident, she withdrew and began to perform poorly in school, even while her family now repeatedly insisted that she “did not change” (366). A surgery that got rid of the white “glob” (364) in her afflicted eye helped to restore her confidence, and she went on to become an academically and socially successful high school student, earning the title of both valedictorian and homecoming queen.

One Child of One’s Own: A Meaningful Digression within the Work(s)

The closing essay of the text is about the role of motherhood in the female artist’s life. It begins with an excerpt from a speech that Walker delivered on Muriel Rukeyser Day at Sarah Lawrence College, where Rukeyser, a poet, once taught. In her speech, Walker praises Rukeyser as a teacher for her refusal to acknowledge divisions between things, including children and art: “She taught no separations where there are, in fact, none, which so much of the instruction in the world is expressly for. If the world contains War, it also contains The Child. If the world contains Hunger, Nuclear Reactors, Fascists, it also contains The Child”. Walker goes on to recount her personal experiences in early motherhood, and how she learned to perceive her young daughter, Rebecca, as an ally rather than a burden. This involved not listening to a lot of conflicting received opinions, which Walker regards as “Women’s Folly”, about both the ill-advised “wisdom” of (not) having children if one is an artist and the advisability of having more than one child so that they can “keep each other company” (374). Walker remembers being motivated to get pregnant largely so that her husband would not have to be drafted for the Vietnam War. She also recalls the difficult time spent as a single mother teaching in New England, while Rebecca was still a young girl as she herself was getting accustomed to motherhood and having to adjust to a frequently hostile and racist environment. Walker ultimately realizes that in an often harsh and unfair world, her daughter is a comfort, not a burden.

In Search of Our Mothers’ Garden

Alice Walker’s essay, In Search of Our Mother’s Garden, talks about her search of the African American women’s suppressed talent, of the artistic skills and talents that they lost because of slavery and a forced way of life. Walker builds up her arguments from historical events as well as the collective experiences of African Americans, including her own. She uses these experiences to back up her arguments formed from recollections of various African American characters and events. Walker points out that a great part of her mother’s and grandmothers’ lives have been suppressed because of their sad, dark pasts. But all of these are not lost because somehow, these are manifested in even the smallest things that they do, and that they were also able to pass it down to the very people that they loved. Our search of our mother’s garden may end back to ourselves.

Walker builds up her argument by mentioning the experiences of other people in the essay. One of them is Jean Toomer, a poet in the early 1920s. He is a man who observed that Black women are unique because they possessed intense spirituality in them, even though their bodies endure every aspect of punishment in every single day of their lives. They were in the strictest sense Saints – crazy, pitiful saints. Walker points out that without a doubt, our mothers and grandmothers belong to this type of people. By building up on the observations of Toomer, she was somehow able to show how hard it was to be a mother or a grandmother or even just a woman at that time, one reason perhaps is that they are black. The mothers and grandmothers at that time endured all of this without any hope that tomorrow will be different, be better. Because of this, they were not able to fully express themselves. They were held back by their society.

Another black character that she used to build her argument is Phillis Wheatley, a Black slave girl with a precarious health. Phillis is a poet and a writer at her own right, but unfortunately, she wasn’t able to do much with it because she was a slave. She didn’t have anything for herself, worse, she didn’t even own herself. Her futile attempts for self expression would be washed up by forced labor and pregnancies. She lost her health, and eventually her life without fully expressing herself through her gift for poetry.

Alice Walker used the story of Phillis to establish the understanding that indeed, African American women at that time were not allowed or didn’t have the luxury of time to exercise their gifts, to hone their talents and abilities, and use them to fully express themselves. By doing so, Walker proves that our mothers and grandmothers lived a boxed life back then, with no way to channel to them emotions and thoughts other than hard labor and forced servitude. She pointed out that we wouldn’t know if anyone of them would’ve bloomed to be poets, singers, actresses, because they never really had the chance to know what they can do.

By building up her argument using these two accounts, she is also presenting very strong evidence to her claim. These accounts were personal experiences of real African American people, and these are not just isolated cases. These are shared experiences not just by these two but by all of their people. Walker can confidently say that there is a lot of Phillis Wheatley in those times, perhaps including her mother and grandmothers. This is concrete evidence because it is not fictional, it is not imaginary, or something conceived out of Walker’s creativity. Slavery, forced pregnancies, poverty, and artistic suppression were the realities during the time of our grandmothers. No one can deny this, and no one can deny the existence of Phillis or the accounts of Jean Toomer.

    Considering Alice Walker’s authority in her arguments, she could be considered as an expert, a reliable source of information on the topic. First off, she is an African American woman, who had her fair share of poverty in her childhood. She was born and raised by hardworking parents, who really had to work day and night to provide for their family. Also, she witnesses first hand that even though her mother may not be a poet or a novelist; she was an artist in the truest sense. Her artistic side is manifested in her gardens and the beautiful flowers that she grows. Alice Walker witnessed all of this, experienced first hand what it was like to be poor and seemingly talentless.

 The accounts that Alice Walker used to prove her points and back up her arguments were African American history that she was all too familiar with. It may have been shared to her by her families, or simply a collective knowledge passed down from one generation to another. She is also well-educated, a wide reader, and an artist. She often cites Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own, relating a white woman’s plight to a black woman’s hardships. She emphasizes that even though she recognizes Woolf’s point about society’s unfair treatment to women of her time, Walker still believes that black women suffered the most (Walker). There is simply nothing that could compare to the artistic suppression that her mother and grandmothers experienced.

In this essay, she is appealing to a general audience, with no specific race or ethnicity. I think this essay was written to highlight the African American women of her mother and grandmother’s time, who were unable to express their talents and hone it to its full potential. This essay is written to inform anyone and everyone reading it about their stories, and of her discovery of her mother’s garden. She was glad to know that it is possible for African American women to express themselves even unknowingly, that it is up to us to discover these “gardens.” She is appealing to the readers in general that even though some people like our mothers and grandmothers seem talentless or artistically inferior, it doesn’t mean that they really lack the talent. It just means that were not looking hard enough to find it.

Alice Walker’s method of using personal experience and historical accounts allow her to truthfully see and say what has really happened. She doesn’t have to make up hypothetical events because she already has a basis for her arguments. Jean Toomer’s recollections and Phillis Wheatley’s experiences are enough proof of her argument. If some people would disagree with what she’s saying, she can always go back to their experiences, to how Phillis suffered without fully using her gift, or what Toomer saw in the streets in the early Twenties. But because of this, I think Walker is somehow limited to the sad and pitiful stories of the past. Well, in reality, most of the stories of African Americans were really sad and pitiful, but still, Walker failed to mention of any successful artist who rose from the ranks of slaves to write her own story. It is either this kind of story really didn’t exist at that time, or Walker just didn’t mention it, since it wasn’t the focus of her essay.

Alice Walker concluded her essay by saying that Phillis Wheatley’s mother was also an artist, and that the achievements of their daughters were in some way brought about by their mothers. Her conclusion states that the mother is somehow responsible in every achievement of their daughter. Any artistic output by a person is also a product of their mother. Indeed, their children are their best creations, their very own wonderful gardens. This conclusion is related to her method because it goes back to how Phillis Wheatley’s mother was somehow responsible for her daughter’s artistic sense, and that beyond the poverty and the hardships that our mothers and grandmothers experienced during their times, they were still able to artistically express themselves through their children, their very own wonderful gardens.

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