Gwendolyn Brooks

Gwendolyn Brooks

Infobox Writer
name = Gwendolyn Brooks



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birthdate = birth date|1917|6|7
birthplace = Topeka, Kansas, United States
deathdate = death date and age|2000|12|3|1917|6|7
deathplace = Chicago, Illinois, United States
occupation = Poet
nationality = American
period = 1920 – 2000
genre = Poetry
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Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks (June 7, 1917December 3, 2000) was an Pulitzer Prize- winning African-American poet.She was best noted for her poetry books like Annie Allen,We Real Cool,and one of her popular books Malcom X.

Biography

Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks was born in Topeka, Kansas to Keziah Wims Brooks and David Anderson Brooks. Brooks' mother was a former school teacher who left teaching for marriage and motherhood, and her father, the son of a runaway slave who fought in the Civil War, had given up his ambition to attend medical school to work as a janitor because he could not afford to attend medical school.

When Brooks was only six weeks old, her family moved to Chicago, Illinois, where she grew up.

Her home life was stable and loving, although she encountered racial prejudice in her neighborhood and in her schools. She first attended Hyde Park High School, a leading white high school, before transferring to all-black Wendell Phillips. Brooks eventually attended an integrated school, Englewood High School. Her enthusiasm for reading and writing was encouraged by her parents. Her father provided a desk and bookshelves, and her mother took her, when she was in high school, to meet Harlem Renaissance poets Langston Hughes and James Weldon Johnson.

Brooks published her first poem in a children's magazine at the age of thirteen. When Brooks was sixteen years old, she had compiled a portfolio of around seventy-five published poems. Aged 17, Brooks stuck to her roots and began submitting her work to "Lights and Shadows", the poetry column of the "Chicago Defender", an African-American newspaper. Although her poems range in style from traditional ballads and sonnets to using blues rhythms in free verse, her characters are often drawn from the poor inner city. During this same period, she also attended Wilson Junior College, from where she graduated in 1936. After publishing more than seventy-five poems and failing to obtain a position with the "Chicago Defender", Brooks began to work a series of typing jobs.

In 1938, Gwendolyn married Henry Blakely and gave birth to two children, Henry, Jr. (1940) and Nora (1951). By 1941, Brooks was taking part in poetry workshops. One particularly influential workshop was organized by Inez Cunningham Stark. Stark was an affluent white woman with a strong literary background, and the workshop participants were all African-American. The group dynamic of Stark's workshop proved especially effective in energizing Brooks and her poetry began to be taken seriously ("The Essential Gwendolyn Brooks," Elizabeth Alexander, Editor, 2005). In 1943 she received an award for poetry from the Midwestern Writers' Conference.

Her first book of poetry, "A Street in Bronzeville", published in 1945 by Harper and Row, brought her instant critical acclaim. She received her first Guggenheim Fellowship and was one of the “Ten Young Women of the Year” in "Mademoiselle" magazine. In 1950, she published her second book of poetry,"Annie Allen," which won her "Poetry" magazine’s Eunice Tietjens Prize and the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, the first given to an African-American.

After John F. Kennedy invited her to read at a Library of Congress poetry festival in 1962, she began her career teaching creative writing. She taught at Columbia College Chicago, Northeastern Illinois University, Elmhurst College, Columbia University, Clay College of New York, and the University of Wisconsin. In 1967, she attended a writer’s conference at Fisk University where, she said, she rediscovered her blackness. This rediscovery is reflected in her work "In The Mecca", a book length poem about a mother searching for her lost child in a Chicago housing project. "In The Mecca" was nominated for the National Book Award for poetry.

In addition to the National Book Award nomination and the Pulitzer Prize, Brooks was made Poet Laureate of Illinois in 1968. In 1985, Brooks became the Library of Congress's Consultant in Poetry, a one year position whose title changed the next year to Poet Laureate. In 1988, she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame. In 1994, she was chosen as the National Endowment for the Humanities' Jefferson Lecturer, one of the highest honors for American literature and the highest award in the humanities given by the federal government. Other awards she received included the Frost Medal, the Shelley Memorial Award, and an award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Brooks was awarded more than seventy-five honorary degrees from colleges and universities worldwide. In 1995, she was honored as the first Woman of the Year by the Harvard Black Men's Forum. On May 1 1996, Brooks returned to her birthplace in Topeka, Kansas. She was the keynote speaker for the Third Annual Kaw Valley Girl Scout Council Women of Distinction Banquet and String of Pearls Auction. A ceremony was held in Brooks’ honor at a local park, located at 37th and Topeka Boulevard.

After a short battle with cancer, Gwendolyn Brooks died on Sunday, December 3 2000, aged 83, at her Southside Chicago home. She died with "pen in hand," surrounded by verse and people she loved. She is [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6331201 buried] at Lincoln Cemetery in Blue Island, IL.

Brooks has stated that to create "bigness" you don't have to create an epic. "Bigness," said Brooks "can be found in a little haiku, five syllables, seven syllables." A great example of this philosophy can be seen in her famous poem "We Real Cool".

Legacy

*Brooks Jr. High School, later renamed Brooks Middle School in 2001 (named after Gwendolyn Brooks) opened in Harvey, Illinois
*In 1995, Brooks Elementary School (named after Gwendolyn Brooks) opened in Aurora, Illinois
*In 2002, Ralph Waldo Emerson Junior High School in Oak Park, Illinois was renamed "Gwendolyn Brooks Middle School."
*In June 2003, the Illinois State Library in Springfield, Illinois was renamed the "Gwendolyn Brooks Illinois State Library.
*In 2000, Southside Prep in Chicago, Illinois was renamed Gwendolyn Brooks College Preparatory Academy

Works

Poetry except as noted.
*"Negro Hero" (1945)
*"The Mother" (1945)
*"A Street in Bronzeville" (1945)
*"Annie Allen" (1950)
*"Maud Martha" (1953) (Fiction)
*"Bronzeville Boys and Girls" (1956)
*"The Bean Eaters" (1960)
*"Selected Poems" (1963)
*"We Real Cool" Broadside (1966)
*"In the Mecca" (1968)
*"Family Pictures" (1970)
*"Black Steel: Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali" (1971)
*"The World of Gwendolyn Brooks" (1971)
*"Aloneness" (1971)
*"Report from Part One: An Autobiography" (1972) (Prose)
*"A Capsule Course in Black Poetry Writing" (1975) (Prose)
*"Aurora" (1972)
*"Beckonings" (1975)
*"Black Love" (1981)
*"To Disembark" (1981)
*"Primer for Blacks" (1981) (Prose)
*"Young Poet's Primer" (1981) (Prose)
*"Very Young Poets" (1983) (Prose)
*"The Near-Johannesburg Boy and Other Poems" (1986)
*"Blacks" (1987)
*"Winnie" (1988)
*"Children Coming Home" (1991)
*"In Montgomery (2000)
*"Malcolm X (1968)

ee also

*African American literature
*List of African American firsts
* [http://www.blkfr8r.com/books/BFP_Books_Five.html "The Book Writers" Poem] A poem, patterned after Brooks's "The Bean Eaters" is a dedication to the lives and legacies of Gwendolyn Brooks and Haki R. Madhubuti. (Free E-Book, professional layout, PDF.)

References

* [http://www.poetryfoundation.org/archive/poet.html?id=843 Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks] at PoetryFoundation.org
* [http://www.poets.org/poet.php/prmPID/165 Audio and Poems by Gwendolyn Brooks] at Poets.org
* [http://www.math.buffalo.edu/~sww/brooks/brooks.html Some poems by Brooks] at the Circle Brotherhood Association
* [http://www.english.uiuc.edu/maps/poets/a_f/brooks/brooks.htm Gwendolyn Brooks] at Modern American Poetry


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