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Films about Queer History

 

Home Girls : A Black Feminist Anthology

Home Girls : A Black Feminist Anthology
by Barbara Smith (Editor), Ann Allen Shockley (Contributor)

 

The Black and White of It

The Black and White of It
 by Ann Allen Shockley

Ann Allen Shockley (1927 - )

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Afro-American Women Writers by Ann Allen Shockley

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Ann Allen ShockleyAnn Allen Shockley by Rita B. Dandridge

This is the first book-length bibliography on Ann Allen Shockley. Despite her consistent and productive output, the writings of Ann Allen Shockley have been neglected by scholars during the last four decades, due to the difficulty in locating her work. This comprehensive list of writings is designed to facilitate future research on Shockley, to allow for a complete view of her writings and their critical reception, and to guide the researcher to the full range of her publications and secondary sources about her and her works.

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Loving Her (Northeastern Library of Black Literature)Loving Her (Northeastern Library of Black Literature) by Ann Allen Shockley

Originally published in 1974, Loving Her is the first novel by an African American author to deal explicitly with interracial lesbian love. The groundbreaking story centers on Renay, a talented black musician who is forced by pregnancy to marry the abusive, alcoholic Jerome Lee. When Jerome sells Renay's piano to finance his drinking, she leaves her destructive marriage, and flees with her young daughter to Terry, a wealthy white writer whom she met at a supper club. Terry awakens in Renay a love and sexual desire beyond her erotic imaginings. Despite the sexist, racist, and homophobic prejudices they must confront, the mutually supportive couple finds physical and emotional joy.

When Jerome discovers the nature of Renay and Terry's friendship, he beats Renay nearly to death and, in a drunken rage, kidnaps his daughter, who subsequently dies in a car accident. Grief stricken and guilty about her love for Terry, Renay feels that God has punished her and breaks off their relationship to atone for her "sins." In the end, she returns to Terry and a renewed life.

"In its exploration of a daring subject boldly shared I think [the novel] has immense value. It enables us to see and understand, perhaps for the first time, the choices certain women have made about how they will live their lives, and allows us glimpses at physical intimacies between women that have been, in the past, deliberately ridiculed or obscured. . . .This book was obviously written out of an earnest passion that its subject be fully acknowledged as existing. It offers the reader an opportunity to develop a new way of seeing and caring." -- Ms. Alice Walker

About the Author

Ann Allen Shockley is Associate Librarian for Special Collections and University Archivist at Fisk University. Her previous works include The Black and the White of It, a collection of short stories, and Say Jesus and Come to Me, a novel. She is also the editor of Afro-American Women Writers, 1746-1933: An Anthology and Critical Guide; Living Black American Authors: A Biographical Directory; and Handbook of Black Librarianship. She lives in Nashville, Tennessee. Alycee Lane is Assistant Professor of English at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She has written extensively on the depiction of lesbians and gays in African American literature.

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The Lesbian Novel

by Sherrie A. Inness

Excerpt:

Ann Allen Shockley is the only novelist who focused on black lesbian lives and reached a broad audience before the 1980s. In Loving Her (1974), an account of an interracial love affair, and her other novels, Shockley explores with sensitivity the difficulties facing African-American lesbians...

  

Sexual Politics and Black Women's Relationships

By Patricia Hill Collins

Excerpt:

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" (1983, 84), has been a major deterrent...

  

Interracial Lesbian Relationships

This page hosts a passage from Wilson and Russell's Divided Sisters: Bridging The Gap Between Black Women and White Women 

Excerpt:

In comparison to White lesbians, African American lesbians may have a special need to come together for support, given the greater hatred against them in their community. An African American author, Ann Allen Shockley, discusses just how strong this homophobia is in her 1974 novel Loving Her, dealing with an interracial lesbian affair. The Black heroine, Renay, who falls in love with a White woman, considers whether she should "come out" to her best straight Black friend Fran. Deciding against it, Renay reflects:
 

Black women were the most vehement about women loving each other. This kind of love was worse to them than the acts of adultery or incest, for it was homophile. It was worse than being inflicted with an incurable disease. Black women could be sympathetic about illegitimacy, raising the children of others, having affairs with married men-but not toward Lesbianism, which many blamed on white women...

  

We need resources on Ann Allen Shockley
Click here for Resource Query Click HERE for Sources for the Biographies

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