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Justine Toms
and
Michael Toms
are with the co-founders and co-presidents of New Dimensions.
 
Alice Walker
is a native of Putnam County, Georgia, and was educated at Spelman College and Sarah Lawrence College. She is the author of more than twenty-six books spanning the genres of the novel, poetry, and the essay. Walker’s books have sold more than fifteen million copies worldwide and have been translated into more than twelve languages. She is one of the leading figures in what scholars term the renaissance in black women’s writing of the 1970s. Walker is the author of
The Color Purple
, which received the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award for fiction and has been adapted for film and the stage, among other novels. Through her anthology
I Love Myself When I Am Laughing and Then Again When I Am Looking Mean and Impressive: A Zora Neale Hurston Reader
, she is chiefly responsible for the revival of scholarly interest in the life and writings of Zora Neale Hurston. Walker is the author of several collections of essays, including the landmark collection
In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens: Womanist Prose.
This collection contains her definition of womanism, which has catalyzed new research and theoretical models in such fields as literary studies, women’s studies, and theological studies. Through
Warrior Marks: Female Genital Mutilation and the Sexual Binding of Women
, a companion volume to the eponymous documentary produced and directed by Pratibha Parmar, Walker has raised international awareness of the practice of female genital mutilation. Her activism also includes support of several social justice movements, including the civil rights movement, the women’s movement, and, most recently, opposition to the wars in
Afghanistan and freedom for the Palestinians. The author of several prize-winning collections of poetry, Walker is the author of the forthcoming
Hard Times Require Furious Dancing: A Year of Poems.
In 2008, she launched
www.alicewalkersgardens.com
, her official Web site where she posts regular contributions to her blog. Walker appointed Emory University as the custodian of her archive, which opened to researchers and to the public in April 2009.
 
Evelyn C. White
attended Harvard University, the Columbia University School of Journalism, and Wellesley College. She is the author of
Alice Walker: A Life
and the editor of
The Black Woman’s Health Book.
Her articles, essays, and reviews have appeared in
Smithsonian, Essence, Ms.
, the
Wall Street Journal
, the
San Francisco Chronicle
, and the
Washington Post.
 
Howard Zinn
(1922–2010) was a historian, political scientist, social critic, activist, and playwright. He is best known as the author of the bestselling
A People’s History of the United States
, which has been adapted into a two-hour documentary that aired on the History Channel in December 2009. Zinn was the author of twenty books and a professor in the department of political science at Boston University.
INDEX OF PEOPLE AND WORKS
c
Absolute Trust in the Goodness of the Earth
Abunimah, Ali
Akhmatova, Anna
Ahmadi, Elechi
“Albert Camus: The Development of His Philosophical Position as Reflected in His Novels and Plays,”
“Alice” (Harper)
Ali, Muhammad
Allende, Isabel
Allen, Robert L.
Alice Walker: A Life
Alice Walker Banned
Alice Walker: The Complete Stories
“Am I Blue,”
Anything We Love Can Be Saved
Armah, Ayi Kwei
Atisha
Attaway, William
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman
(Gaines)
The Awakening
(Chopin)
Awakening Compassion
(Chödrön)
Baines, Bobby “Tug,”
“Ballad of the Brown Girl,”
Ballard, Audrey
Barks, Coleman
Bash_, Matsuo
Batista, Fulgencio
Bearden, Romare
The Beautyful Ones Are Not Yet Born
(Armah)
“Beauty,”
Belafonte, Harry
“Be Nobody’s Darling,”
The Best American Essays of the Century
(Oates, ed.)
The Best Short Stories by Negro Writers
(Hughes, ed.)
Bible
Blackburn, Sarah
Black Is . . . Black Ain’t
(Riggs)
“A Black Man Talks of Reaping” (Bontemps)
Black Women Novelists
(Christian)
The Bluest Eye
(Morrison)
Bolen, Jean Shinoda
Bond, Julian
Bontemps, Arna
The Book of Salt
(Truong)
Booth, Susan
Brooks, Gwendolyn
Bring, Ellen
Brontë, Charlotte
Brontë, Emily
Buddhism for Beginners
(Kornfield)
“Burial,”
Byrd, Rudolph P.
By the Light of My Father’s Smile
Caldicott, Helen
Calloway, Tallulah (Nettie)
Camus, Albert
Cane
(Toomer)
Canterbury Tales
(Chaucer)
Castro, Fidel
Catullus
Chaney, James
Chekhawa, Geshe
“Chic Freedom’s Reflection,”
“The Child Who Favored Daughter,”
Chödrön, Pema
Chopin, Kate
Christian, Barbara
“The Civil Rights Movement: What Good Was It?”
Cleaver, Kathleen
Clinton, Bill
The Color Purple
(novel)
The Color Purple
(film)
The Color Purple
(musical)
The Concubine
(Ahmadi)
Cooper, Jane
Corea, Gene
Cosby, Bill
cummings, e.e.
Dalai Lama
Dangarembga, Tsitsi
Darden, Carole
Davenport, Kiana
Davis, Angela de Beauvoir, Simone
DeMoss, David
Deng Ming-Dao
Dhammapada
“Diary of an African Nun,”
Dickens, Charles
Dickinson, Emily
Diop, Aminata
Diving into the Wreck
(Rich)
“Dominance and Control” (Corea)
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor
Douglass, Frederick
Dreifus, Claudia
Duvauchelle, Zelie Kuliaikanu’u
Du Bois, W.E.B.
Edelman, Marian Wright
Edwards, Audrey
Ellison, Ralph
The Essential Rumi
(Barks, trans.)
Estés, Clarissa Pinkola
Eva Luna
(Allende)
Evers, Medgar
“Everyday Use,”
Everything That Rises Must Converge
(O’Connor)
Faulkner, William
Ferris, William R.
Finding the Green Stone
“Flowers,”
Fonda, Jane
For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow is Enuf
(Shange)
“For My Sister Molly Who in the Fifties,”
Franklin, Shirley Clarke
Freedman, Marcia
French, Marilyn
From a Land Where Other People Live
(Lorde)
From a Native Daughter
(Trask)
Gaines, Ernest J.
Galloway, George
Giddings, Paula
“The Girl Who Died #2,”
Glover, Danny
The Gnostic Gospels
(Pagels)
Goddesses in Everywoman
(Bolen)
Gogol, Nikolai
Goldberg, Whoopi
Goldsmith, Judith
Gone with the Wind
(Mitchell)
Goodall, Jane
Goodman, Amy
Goodman, Andrew
Good Night, Willie Lee, I’ll See You in the Morning
Gorky, Maxim
Graves, Robert
The Great Cosmic Mother
(Sjoo and Mor)
Grossman, David
Grosvenor, Vertamae
Guber, Peter
Guevara, Che
Guy-Sheftall, Beverly
Hairston, Loyle
Hansberry, Lorraine
Hard Times Require Furious Dancing
Hardy, Thomas
Harlem Renaissance
(Huggins)
Harper, Frances Watkins
Harper, Michael S.
Haydn, Hiram
Head, Bessie
The Healing Wisdom of Africa
(Somé)
Hemingway, Ernest
Henry, Dr. Morriss M.
Her Blue Body Everything We Know
Heston, Charlton
Holliday, Billie
Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful
The House of the Spirits
(Allende)
Hoy, Jody
Hughes, Langston
Huggins, Nathan
Hugo, Victor
Hurston, Zora Neale
I Ching
“If There Was Any Justice,”
I Love Myself When I Am Laughing. . . and Then Again When I Am Looking Mean and Impressive: A Zora Neale Hurston Reader
Infants of the Spring
(Thurman)
In Love and Trouble
“In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens,”
In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens
Issa, Kobayashi
Jackson, Jesse
Jane Eyre
(Brontë)
Jefferson, Margo
Jeffers, Trellie
Jesus
“Johann,”
Jones, Quincy
Jordan, June
Jung, Carl
King, B.B.
King, Coretta Scott
King, Martin Luther, Jr.
Kingston, Maxine Hong
Kornfield, Jack
The Kreutzer Sonata
(Tolstoy)
LaChanze
Langston Hughes: American Poet
,
Larsen, Nella
“The Last Toast” (Akhmatova)
Laye, Camara
Leaving India
(Hajratwala)
Lessing, Doris
Leventhal, Melvyn R.
Leventhal, Miriam
Lewis, John
Lief, Judith
Lightfoot-Klein, Hanny
Li Po
Lives of Courage
(Russell)
Living by the Word
“Looking for Zora,”
Lorde, Audre
Lumumba, Patrice
Lykes, Bill
Lykes, Peggy
Lynd, Helen
Lynd, Staughton
Makdisi, Saree
Malcolm X
Mandela, Nelson
Mandela, Winnie
Mander, Jerry
Man Does, Woman Is
(Graves)
“The Man in the Yellow Terry,”
Marcus, Greil
Marley, Bob
Márquez, Gabriel García
Marshall, Paule
Maru
(Head)
Maynard, Nana
McCall, Monica
McCloud, Shiloh
Meade, Michael
Meridian
Mistress of Spices
(Divakaruni)
Morgan, Sally
Morrison, Toni
Moses
Moses, Bob
The Motherpeace Tarot
(Vogel and Noble)
My Place
(Morgan)
“My Teacher,”
Nag Hammadi
Nappy Edges
(Shange)
Nathans, R.
Nelson, Kate
Nervous Conditions
(Dangarembga)
The New Astrology
(White)
Nhat Hanh, Thich
Nietzsche, Friedrich
Nixon, Richard
“Nothing Is Right,”
Now Is the Time to Open Your Heart
Oates, Joyce Carol
Obama, Barack H.
O’Brien, John
O’Connor, Flannery
Of Water and the Spirit
(Somé)
“O Landscape of My Birth,”
“The Old Warrior Terror,”
Oliver Twist
(Dickens)
Olsen, Tillie
Once
One Hundred Years of Solitude
(Márquez)
“Only Justice Can Stop a Curse,”
“On Stripping Bark from Myself,”
Ortega, Daniel
Ortega, Rosario
Osgood, Charlotte Mason
Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions
(Steinem)
Overcoming Speechlessness
Ovid
Pagels, Elaine
Parks, Rosa
Parmar, Pratibha
A Path with Heart
(Kornfield)
A People’s History of the United States
(Zinn)
Petry, Ann
Piercy, Marge
Plato
Playing in the Dark
(Morrison)
A Poem Traveled Down My Arm
Poole, May
Possessing the Secret of Joy
Prisoners of Ritual
(Lightfoot-Klein)
Proust, Marcel
p’tek, Okot
Quicksand
(Larsen)
The Radiance of the King
(Laye)
Rainey, Ma
Randall, Margaret
Reagan, Ronald
Reagon, Bernice Johnson
The Red Book
(Jung)
Reed, Ishmael
“Reflections on Turning the Wheel,”
Remembrance of Things Past
(Proust)
Resurrection
(Tolstoy)
“The Revenge of Hannah Kemhuff,”
“Revolutionary Petunias,”
Revolutionary Petunias
Reynolds, Birda
Rich, Adrienne
Richards, Amy
Riggs, Marlon
BOOK: The World Has Changed
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