This Poet And Activist Fought For Liberation For All Marginalized People

Audre Lorde speaking
Abeni Jones
November 16, 2021

As a self-described “[B]lack, lesbian, mother, warrior, poet,” Audre Lorde’s intellectual strength and biting critiques of white feminism forever changed society. Through her many books and essays, her influence can’t be understated.

But are her words still relevant today?

 

 

Yes! When, in the 1970s, she eloquently argued for more understanding of “difference” within feminism, it was extremely controversial – and still is.

“Without community there is certainly no liberation, no future,” she argued, and women of all experiences have to fight together for liberation. But we can’t ignore those different experiences.

 

As women, we have been taught… to ignore our differences,” she explained in her (in)famous essay, “The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle The Master’s House.”

Any Black woman who has ever tried to discuss the experience of being Black AND a woman, and received criticism from both Black men and white women for being “divisive,” knows that her words remain relevant.

 

She argued that embracing and understanding our differences – across lines of race, gender, disability, and sexuality – is essential for true liberation of all people. In this respect, we still have a lot of work to do.

Though it’s been decades since her death, her words continue to resonate, and we should use them as tools in the fight for liberation. Pick up one of her books today and get inspired!

 

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