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Films about Queer History

 

Barbara Deming (1917 - 1984)

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Prisons That Could Not Hold

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I Change, I Change - Poems by Barbara Deming

The poems here follow a chronology that mirrors Barbara Deming's relationships; each chapter is named for a woman the author loved. The early poems are full of freedom and passion and, as Grace Paley notes in the preface, bear a resemblance to the work of e.e.cummings. The later works become more modulated, reserved, and polished, an indication of the author's maturation and her response to pain and trouble with discipline and vision. The change reflects a turn from inward to outward concerns, as Deming grew more active in various civil rights movements.

Deming, like Marie Claire Blais, Kate Millet, and others who grew up and eventually came out in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s, continued to strive for a supportive community in a desire to combine the strength of the group with the strength of the individual in a way that would allow freedom and responsibility to coexist. She sought to reconcile the need to make art and to make a living, and to make a "right living." She became an activist and worked to make the world recognize the needs of women, the underprivileged, minorities, and eventually the gay and lesbian community. Most of the poems in this volume deal with love, with self-criticism, with passion and with nature, and with personal rather than political issues. Only some of the later poems comment on the political struggle, ridiculing the church for acting as if God the Father could suckle babies, for example, as if the traditionally patriarchal structure would nourish those outside the political pale.

As a poet and as the granddaughter of an Armenian immigrant who buried himself in assimilation to try to save his children and himself the pain of racism, I identify with and respect Deming. Her struggle for acceptance, for love, for the chance to do her work, and for spiritual strength in a world that would sometimes imply that she was not worthy of any of these things, and her persistence in spite of the difficulties, is exemplary. The introduction, preface, and epilogue add a great deal to the book as literary biography, although most of the poetry would stand alone. Deming wrote, after her last operation for cancer:

AND NOW MY SPIRIT GUIDES HAIL ME AND SMILE I'VE SUNG MYSELF BEYOND THIS LIFE'S PALE.

I would recommend this volume of poems for libraries with poetry collections, collections that lack women or lesbian authors, and as counterpoint to Prison Notes or some of her other political or autobiographical titles. -- Review by N. Parker-Gibson, Cornette Library, West Texas A & M University

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Barbara Deming: An Activist Life

Essay by Donna McCabe, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1995

Excerpt:

This essay recounts Barbara's activist life, her writings, her growth towards feminism and a truly nonviolent society. Barbara Deming wrote herself, and her causes into a history that too easily overlooked her and them. Her ideologies were consistent throughout her life, growing from nonviolent resistance and moving through the women's movement. Words and actions were the root of Barbara's life. An intellectual and moralist, Barbara's words and actions resound in harmony with today's feminist theories. She was a visionary, yet practical. She fought violence and corporate greed throughout her life...

 

Deming, Barbara Papers, 1917-1984

The papers of Barbara Deming were given to the Schlesinger Library in October and November 1988, March 1989, and April 1990 by her literary executor Judith McDaniel, and in April 1991 by Mary Meigs. The collection was processed in part with funds from BD's estate given by the executor, Blue Lunden.

  

Barbara Deming Memorial Peace Walk

This was a peace walk organized by Donna McCabe as part of a Master of Fine Arts at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Although the walk took place in 1996.

This site includes a time line and selections from Barbara Deming's writings:

Wonderful Barbara Deming quotes
Southern Peace Walk: Two Issues or One
Prison Notes (excerpt)
We Are All Part of One Another
On Anger
To Fear Jane Alpert Is To Fear Ourselves
Remembering Who We Are
The Purpose of Sexuality
Statement of the Waterloo 54

There is also a Poems Page

For Barbara Smith
My love is water
Let us touch, love
Behind her the sea...
After my father died
Variation
Memorial for Ronald Moose

  

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