Sent to you by moya via Google Reader:
On this day, in 1934, Audre Lorde was born. She named herself "black, lesbian, feminist, mother, poet warrior" and gave us the words to do the same. Although many quotes will be in circulation today, I'd like to offer this one up, as a particularly good example of Lorde's crunkness.
All too often the message comes loud and clear to Black women from Black men: "I am the only prize worth having and there are not too many of me, and remember, I can always go elsewhere. So if you want me, you'd better stay in your place which is away from one another, or i will call you 'lesbian' and wipe you out." black women are programmed to define ourselves within this male attention and to compete with each other for it rather than to recognize and move upon our common interests.
-Audre Lorde
Scratching the Surface: Some Notes on Barriers to Women and Loving
Publised in The Black Scholar, vol. 9 no. 7 1978
Can you believe she said this in 78?! That it is still all too relavant today?
h/t to Yolo Akili for the quote.
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1 comment:
So glad you posted this. I didn't realize that today was her birthday.
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