Contemplation
Mototaki, Akita, Japon
Takeshi Shikama
Diane di Prima
So this is healing, then, the opposite of the ambiguous dread: fullness.
- What My Bones Know, Stephanie Foo
My first pick as a staff member at UWM’s Special Collections is The Women Who Hate Me by Dorothy Allison (b. 1949), published by Long Haul Press in Brooklyn, 1983. This small, intimate book of poetry also features illustrations by Laurie McLaughlin.
Born in Greenville, South Carolina to a fifteen-year-old unwed mother, Allison grew up in a very poor, working-class family in the 1950s. Her burgeoning lesbian identity and strained/abusive relationship with her stepfather left her feeling ostracized and out of place. After attending Florida Presbyterian college and the New School of Social Research for anthropology, she found solace in a community of other feminists and eventually made a career for herself developing stories and poems often based on her experiences. She would receive mainstream recognition at the publishing at her 1992 novel, Bastard Out of Carolina.
What cannot be overlooked in Allison’s writing is her honesty and ability to lay everything bare; to articulate what is seen but never said, as gut-wrenching and brutal as it may be. With themes of sexual abuse, child abuse, class struggle, women, feminism, lesbianism, and family throughout, she dedicates this collection of poetry to “the women who hate me who made me angry enough to write these poems,” and “for the women who love me who read the poems and helped me pull all the pieces together.”
- Grant, Special Collections Undergraduate Intern
Burt Glinn Sammy Davis, Jr, New York City 1959
"I'm colored, Jewish and Puerto Rican. When I move into a neighborhood, I wipe it out!" sammy Davis, Jr
i want my life to feel like this satc commercial
how it feels knowing that loneliness is still time spent with the world
jamiehaller___