THE RELEVANT QUEER: Audre Lorde, Teacher and Black Radical Lesbian Feminist

Audre Lorde, 1989. Photo Dagmar Schultz
Audre Lorde, 1989. Photo Dagmar Schultz

“Life is very short and what we have to do must be done in the now. Revolution is not a onetime event”

TRQ: Audre Lorde, Born February 18, 1934

Writer, teacher and Black radical lesbian feminist, Audre Lorde was born in Harlem. Her mother was from Barbados. Her father, from Carriacou in the Grenadines. Lorde attended Hunter High School, and published her first poem in Seventeen magazine while still a student.

Lorde married Edward Rollins, a white gay man and together they had two children. Lorde and Rollins divorced in 1970, and in 1972 she met Frances Clayton, her partner of seventeen years.

Lorde earned her BA from Hunter College, her MLS from Columbia, and worked as a librarian in the public schools of New York throughout the 1960’s. In 1968, Lorde was poet-in-residence at Tougaloo College in Mississippi, where she affirmed both her political activism around queer identity and civil rights, and her dedication to the quality of her writing.

Lorde drew inspiration from the poets Keats, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and Helene Margaret in writing about her experiences as a black queer teacher in the white world of academia. Often pulling from her personal journals, Lorde’s writing  connects her personal experiences to the political challenges facing a queer black woman. Through this, she reshaped understandings of queer theory, feminist theory, and critical race studies.

Her canonical essay, “The Master’s Tools Will Not Dismantle the Master’s House,” is one of the first to explore the intersections of race, class, and gender.

“I have a duty,” Lorde once stated, “to speak the truth as I see it and to share not just my triumphs, not just the things that felt good, but the pain, the intense, often unmitigating pain.”

The call of Lorde’s poetry for social and racial justice, and its depiction of the experience of queerness and queer sexuality, made Lorde central to liberation and activist movements. Her importance to the civil rights and Black cultural movements, second-wave feminism, and the LGBTQ fight for equality, is undisputed.

Lorde’s theory of difference reframed the fight for gay rights as part of the greater fight against all oppression against those who embody difference.

In 1979, Lorde joined the National March on Washington for Lesbian and Gay Rights. Two years later, Lorde and writer Barbara Smith launched Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press, to support the work of black feminists.

Dissecting conservative resistance to her work, Lorde told interviewer Charles H. Rowell, “My sexuality is part and parcel of who I am, and my poetry comes from the intersection of me and my worlds… [White, arch-conservative senator] Jesse Helms’s objection to my work is not about obscenity … or even about sex. It is about revolution and change.”

Lorde was diagnosed with liver cancer in 1985. Three years later, her relationship with Frances Clayton was over. Lorde spent her remaining six years in St. Croix with Gloria Joseph and a larger community of women.

Committed to her queer black experience, Lorde once said, “I don’t want to die looking the other way.”

After her death on the night of November 17, 1992, Audre Lorde was memorialised the world over. Her ashes were scattered in the Caribbean, Germany and the United States.

Ausdre Lorde speaking at the Third World Gay Conference, circa 1979. Photo Dr. Ron Simmons, Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Ron Simmons
Ausdre Lorde speaking at the Third World Gay Conference, circa 1979. Photo Dr. Ron Simmons, Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Ron Simmons
Audre Lorde sunbathing and reading Marilyn Chin's Dwarf Bamboo, 1981. Photo retrieved from Audre Lorde The Wind Is Spirit Facebook page
Audre Lorde sunbathing and reading Marilyn Chin’s Dwarf Bamboo, 1981. Photo retrieved from Audre Lorde: The Wind Is Spirit Facebook page
Audre Lorde with Ika Hügel-Marshall, Winterfeldt market, 1990. Photo Audre Lorde Berlin
Audre Lorde with Ika Hügel-Marshall, Winterfeldt market, 1990. Photo Audre Lorde Berlin
Audre Lorde and her partner Dr. Gloria Joseph, n.d. Photo Dagmar Schultz
Audre Lorde and her partner Dr. Gloria Joseph, n.d. Photo Dagmar Schultz
Audre Lorde and her partner Dr. Gloria Joseph, n.d. Photo Unknown
Audre Lorde and her partner Dr. Gloria Joseph, n.d. Photo Unknown
Audre Lorde in her home study, Staten Island, NY in 1981. Photo Joan E. Biren
Audre Lorde in her home study, Staten Island, NY in 1981. Photo by JEB (Joan E. Biren, @jebmedia on Instagram)
Audre Lorde in front of the building where she staid on Cheruskerstrasse, 1990. Photo Audre Lorde Berlin
Audre Lorde in front of the building where she staid on Cheruskerstrasse, 1990. Photo Audre Lorde Berlin
Pat Parker and Audre Lorde, 1981. Photo by Susan D. Fleischmann, Courtesy of Schlesinger Library.2
Pat Parker and Audre Lorde, 1981. Photo by Susan D. Fleischmann, Courtesy of Schlesinger Library
Cover of BLK magazine featuring an image of Audre Lorde, April 1989. Gift of Alan Bell, © BLK Publishing Company, Inc
Cover of BLK magazine featuring an image of Audre Lorde, April 1989. Gift of Alan Bell, © BLK Publishing Company, Inc
Audre Lorde, 1989. Photo Dagmar Schultz
Audre Lorde, 1989. Photo Dagmar Schultz

About the Authors

Troy Wise is currently a PhD student at UAL Central St Martins and teaches fashion and graphic design at London College of Contemporary Arts. His background is in marketing and is founder and co-editor of Image Amplified. He lives in, and is continually fascinated by, the city of London.

Rick Guzman earned his most recent MA at UAL Central St Martins in Applied Imagination in the Creative Industries. He currently holds two MA’s and an MBA in the New Media, Journalism and International Business fields. Co-editor at Image Amplified since its start, he lives in London, is fascinated by history and is motivated by continuing to learn and explore.

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Sources:

Poetry Foundation

Out History

New Statesman

THE RELEVANT QUEER: Audre Lorde, Teacher and Black Radical Lesbian Feminist

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