Description
In telling her life story, Grahn reflects on the profound cultural shifts brought about by the women's and gay rights movements of the 1960s and 1970s. The simple revolution she recounts involved not just the formation of new institutions (the Women's Press Collective, Oakland Feminist Women's Health Center, A Woman's Place Bookstore), but the creation of whole new ways of living, including collective feminist households that cut through the political and social isolation of women.
Throughout, Grahn describes her involvement with iconic scenes and figures from the history of these years--the Altamont Music Festival, the Black Panthers, the imprisoned Manson women, the Weather Underground, Inez Garc a--sometimes as witness, sometimes as participant, sometimes as instigator. Looking at these events and people within the context of the women's movement, and through the prism of Judy Grahn's luminous poetic sensibility, we see them anew.
In A SIMPLE REVOLUTION, Grahn refuses dramatic, psychological narratives that readers have come to expect in memoirs. What emerges is a new, deeply compelling story, grounded in honesty, humility, and compassion--compassion for herself and for the wonderful, if wounded, people who surround her...striking an artful balance between remembering her past, the past of others, and intervening politically in how we think about history.--Julie Enzer
Author: Judy Grahn
Publisher: Aunt Lute Books
Published: 11/27/2012
Pages: 360
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.90lbs
Size: 8.80h x 5.80w x 0.90d
ISBN13: 9781879960879
ISBN10: 1879960877
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | LGBTQ+ Studies | Lesbian Studies
- Social Science | Women's Studies
- Biography & Autobiography | LGBTQ+
About the Author
Judy Grahn is an internationally known poet, writer, and social theorist. She grew up in a working-class home in New Mexico. Seeking options not available in her small-town community of origin, she broke away and joined the Air Force. She was given a blue discharge (named for the blue paper on which these letters were printed) from the Air Force because she was a lesbian. This experience galvanized Grahn into public ownership of her lesbianism, into the writing of poetry, into lesbian activism, and into the project of publishing lesbian literature. She co-founded the Women s Press Collective in Oakland, California in 1969; using a barrel mimeograph machine, the WPC published the work of Grahn and other lesbians, including Pat Parker, Willyce Kim, and more. The WPC edition of Grahn s book "Edward the Dyke and Other Poems" appeared in 1971. Other poetry collections include "The Common Woman" (1969), "A Woman is Talking to Death" (1974), "The Queen of Swords" (1987), and "Love Belongs to Those Who Do the Feeling" (2009). Aunt Lute published a collection of Grahn's work in 2009, "The Judy Grahn Reader." In addition to her poetry, Grahn has written extensively of what it means to be a lesbian and a lesbian writer in books including "Another Mother Tongue: Gay Words, Gay Worlds "(1984), "Really Reading Gertrude Stein" (1989), and "Blood, Bread and Roses: How Menstruation Created the World" (1993)."
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