Pat Parker -- that revolutionary, raw and as they used to say, "right-on sister" -- would be celebrating her fifty-fifth birthday in 1999 had she not died of breast cancer ten years ago. To honor her work and call attention to the significance of her contributions, Firebrand Books is publishing a new, expanded edition of her classic, Movement In Black. With an incisive introduction by Cheryl Clarke, celebrations/ remembrances/tributes from ten outstanding African American women writers, and a dozen previously unpublished pieces, Movement In Black is a must read/ must have on your book shelf. Whether she was presenting her poetry on street corners, performing with other women -- writers, musicians, activists -- in bars and auditoriums, rallying the crowd at political events, preaching to the converted, or converting the ill-informed, Pat Parker was a presence. She wrote about gut the lives of ordinary Black people, violence, loving women, the legacy of her African American heritage, being queer. She was a woman who engaged life fully, both personally and as a political activist, linking the struggles for racial, gender, sexual, and class equality long before it was "PC" to do so. She died as she lived -- fighting forces larger than herself. The publication of Movement In Black is an opportunity, both for those who were around the first time and those who are new to her work, to experience and enjoy Pat Parker's power.
Pat Parker was an American poet and activist. Both her poetry and her activism drew from her experiences as an African-American lesbian feminist. Her poetry spoke about her tough childhood growing up in poverty, dealing with sexual assault, and the murder of a sister.
While searching on the internet for black authors and black poetry I came across a poem entitled...Movement in Black. I read the poem and then listened to it read aloud. I really liked the poem. I decided to purchase the book. Although I didn't like a lot of the poems that she wrote or I just simply couldn't relate to them some of them I could. For those readers who don't know Pat Parker, she was an African-American lesbian, feminist, poet and activist. Pat Parker participated in political activism and had early involvement with the Black Panther Party, Black Women's Revolutionary Council and formed the Women's Press Collective. She died in 1989 at the age of 45 from breast cancer.
What an incredible book! Pat Parker was a dear friend of Audre Lorde but never blew up as much as she did. I first heard about her through APG’s Black Feminist Breathing meditation. I’ve been hooked on her work ever sense. Some of the sharpest political analysis ever. Just wit beyond measure! Get you this book and starting quoting and sharing her work with others. So much to learn from her life and legacy!
Un must de la littérature lesbienne, une poésie forte et sublime, exprimant la colère et l'injustice du racisme et de la lesbophobie mais aussi la joie de l'amour et de s'être libérée de l'hétérosexualité.
What a Phenomenal Woman with expectional poems. If you knew Pat Parker you knew determation, scarfice, and Love! Read this book look in the mirror if you don't love who you see think of Pat Parker (Marty Dunham). I love Pat Parker she will never be forgotten!
With some poets, you read their poems and good or bad, what you’ve done is read some poems. Pat Parker is different, reading these poems, and these tributes, and the end note from her partner, you feel like you got to know Pat Parker, got to love her.
When i make love to you i try with each stroke of my tongue to say i love you to tease i love you to hammer i love you to melt i love you & your sounds drift down oh god! oh jesus! and i think - here it is, some dude's getting credit for what a woman has done, again.
absolutely incredible. i wish her work were more well-known and easier to find, because so many of the things she was writing about and fighting for are still so relevant today.
Pat Parker is quintessential reading for anyone interested in any kind of radical or social justice poetry but her influence is often obscured by more popular authors who show up more recently in black lesbian literature. I'm certainly not arguing that anyone should stop reading Audre Lorde or Alice Walker, just that there's a lineage that stretches past them!
Parker's poetry has a strong narrative element to it, much of it autobiographical, and uses her narrative skills to offer the experiences of the poet herself at the intersections of many different identities along with poignant insight into the lives of black lesbians in the 70s. She focus herself neatly on the real lived experiences of the folks in her community and speaks truth to power on every page.
She got her start reading her poetry publicly and it shows. Her best poems are the ones where her voice shines through and you feel her presenting her work to you across the decades--her weakest poems are the ones that are heart-wrenching in recordings but lose an element of their authenticity when memorialized on paper. Other reviewers have admonished her work as simple, but I don't think simplicity is a flaw. Western poetry is fixated on overly-complex flowery screeds but Parker celebrates simplicity, relishes in being straight-forward.
Finally, to really get your mind on Pat Parker as a poet, listen to her read aloud. Below she recites three different poems from Movement in Black (my personal three favorites, the ones that I feel best exemplify her and this collection):
Movement in Black offers precious advice on bravery and resilience, and feels just as necessary now nearly 40 years later as it did when it was first published in 1978.