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June Jordan  (1936 -)

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Soldier: A Poet's Childhood

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Haruko/Love Poems : Love PoemsHaruko/Love Poems : Love Poems by June Jordan, Adrienne Cecile Rich, Sara Miles (Editor)

Never before has there been a single volume of love poetry so extraordinary in range. In Haruko/Love Poems, June Jordan expands and redefines the traditional idea of the love poem. In the first half of this volume, Jordan writes to Haruko in the style of the Neruda love poems. Taking from the haiku its purity and economy, but giving these poems a vision that is Jordan's own, the Haruko poems are at once urgent, passionate, and complex. Following the Haruko poems is a selection by Adrienne Rich and Sara Miles for 20 years of love poems that bear witness to the depth and breadth of Jordan's poetic brilliance. -- Midwest Book Review

"June Jordan makes us think of Akhmatova, of Neruda. She is among the bravest, the most outraged. She is the universal poet." -- Alice Walker

June Jordan is one of the most musically and lyrically gifted poets of the late twentieth century. Her poems are extraordinarily tonal, sensuous, capturing moments or ways of being which might make love - in many dimensions - more possible, more revolution - directed. -- Adrienne Rich

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Affirmative Acts : Political EssaysAffirmative Acts : Political Essays by June Jordan

Activist, poet, essayist, and professor June Jordan collects some of her most provocative essays from the 1990s in Affirmative Acts, a book that, like Civil Wars and Technical Difficulties, showcases her ability to appeal to a wide range of readers, covering topics like politics, race relations, the intersections between activism and passion, women's health care, and affirmative-action debates.

Jordan articulates complex and uncompromising points of view without alienating her readers in a swirl of jargon and tired political rhetoric. In the title essay, she writes: "I'm saying that calculated racialization of poverty, inequality, immigration, and education colors these realities so that too many of us perceive these issues as strictly equivalent to this or that race/this or that language/this or that ethnic heritage when, actually, the issue is how we ... devise a democratic, and peaceable, means to go on, or not!" Before she explains her proposed solutions, Jordan follows this sentiment with a simple observation: "It would seem we'd better get busy."

With essays like "We Are All Refugees," "My Mess and Ours," and "Notes on a Model of Resistance," Affirmative Acts places a human voice behind the cold facts of injustice, combining prose and poetry in an irreverent, conversational tone. Jordan espouses an earnest perspective informed by the spirit of collectivism, activism, social consciousness, respect, and hope. --Amy Wan

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Sexual Politics and Black Women's Relationships

By Patricia Hill Collins

Excerpt:

African-American women inhabit this conceptual terrain and have not been immune to its assumptions. For Black women who have already been labeled the Other by virtue of our race and gender, the threat of being labeled a lesbian can have a chilling effect on Black women's ideas and on our relationships; with one another. In speculating about why so many competent Black women writers and reviewers have avoided examining lesbianism, Ann Allen Shockley suggests that "the fear of being labeled a Lesbian, whether they were one or not," has been a major deterrent. June Jordan contends that the male bias in the Black intellectual community has used the notion of Black lesbians as the ultimate Other in discrediting Black feminism: "Evidently, feminism was being translated into lesbianism, into something interchangeable with lesbianism, and the taboo on feminism, within the Black intellectual community, had long been exceeded in its orthodox severity only by the taboo on the subject of the lesbian."  To Jordan the Black intellectual community has done a disservice to African-Americans because "the phenomena of self-directed Black women or the phenomena of Black women loving other women have hardly been uncommon, let alone unbelievable, events to Black people not privy to theoretical strife about correct and incorrect Black experience..."

  

June Jordan Biography

From Voices from the Gaps:  Women Writers of Color

Excerpt:

June Jordan was born on July 9, 1936 in Harlem, New York, to Granville and Mildred Jordan, Jamaican natives. Her father was a night shift postal worker and her mother was a nurse. When Jordan was five, the family moved to the Bedford-Stuyvesant area of Brooklyn. During her high school years, Jordan was "completely immersed in a white universe" while a student at Milwood High School and Northfield School for girls in Massachusetts. At Northfield, Jordan "discovered her poetic voice." Jordan's home situation was a source of conflict and anguish because of her father's physical abuse and her mother's denial. This environment resulted in Jordan's writing extensively about her parents and their positive and negative influences...

 

June Jordan

By Agnes Moreland Jackson

Excerpt:

Students of the 1960s and early 1970s (as well as today's college-age youth) thought about and acted on nonfamilial kinships, that is, relationships between individuals having agency; groups, personhood in the community, space or turf--local/national/global; responsibility--private and corporate; power/powerlessness; most of the "-isms" and phobias of historical and contemporary societies worldwide. These are some of the recurring subjects in Jordan's three poems included in The Heath Anthology and throughout her volumes of poetry and essays. She belongs to the world (though it despises and rejects her); and her voice of discovery, pain, rage, and resolution penetrates our minds and emotions. College students, therefore, recognize her concerns while also wondering sometimes whether Jordan's societal and world portrait is "as bad" as her texts declare. Even those as wounded as she describes herself have to think deeply to make the connections, see the intricate patterns, and analyze situations to determine Jordan's accuracy or error about social and human conditions. Because the issues in her poetry reflect our everyday experiences, we can comprehend Jordan's poetry and note correspondences between and among the following: Jordan's observations and protestations; daily news about victims of violence whose lives are affected by political and economic decisions...

 

Ebony Love Poetry Index:  June Jordan

This site lists valuable links for June Jordan research, and includes a discussion board, biography and profile.

  

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