Alice Walker

Standard Name: Walker, Alice
Birth Name: Alice Malsenior Walker
Married Name: Alice Leventhal
Self-constructed Name: Tallulah-Kate
AW is an African-American writer and activist, who began publishing in the late 1960s and is best known for her novel The Color Purple. As well as other novels, she publishes or has published poems, short stories, essays, and journalism, and has produced a biography for children. All are linked by her passionate activism on a range of related social and political topics. Over the course of her career she has drawn fire both from white commentators for alleged bias in favour of her black characters, and from black commentators for allegedly bringing blacks into disrepute by unflattering depictions of them.

Connections

Connections Sort ascending Author name Excerpt
Literary responses Zora Neale Hurston
Their Eyes Were Watching Godgenerally well received by white critics, including a reviewer for the New York Times who declared it a well nigh perfect story. On the other hand the leading black literary...
Literary responses Zora Neale Hurston
The research and writing of African-American author Alice Walker has been vital to the posthumous recuperation of ZNH 's life's work.
Literary responses Toni Morrison
Sarah Blackburn , who now suspected The Bluest Eye of having been over-praised, nevertheless celebrated TM as someone who really knows how to clank a sentence, and whose dialogue is so compressed and life-like that...
Literary responses Toni Morrison
Meanwhile, Jerry H. Bryant in the Nation perceived in Sula (along with Ed Bullins 's The Reluctant Rapist and Walker 's In Love & Trouble) something entirely unprecedented in black writing—a fierceness bordering...
Literary responses Buchi Emecheta
Reviewers were very positive in journals such as the Guardian and the Sunday Times, and BE was invited to make a television appearance. The Times Literary Supplement invited her to write an article on...
Literary responses Tillie Olsen
Ann or Annie Hershey 's film, Tillie Olsen—A Heart in Action, gathers a number of tributes to her and to the lasting effects of her work from her feminist peers, figures like Gloria Steinem
Intertextuality and Influence Meiling Jin
In the introduction to the book of poems that was her first publication, MJ noted that poetry was a form of expression that comes easier to me than most others. This state of affairs was...
Intertextuality and Influence Naomi Alderman
NA says this book was facilitated by the success of fictions about other, distinct communities: Zadie Smith 's White Teeth, Monica Ali 's Brick Lane, and especially influenced by Jeanette Winterson 's Oranges...
Intertextuality and Influence Pat Barker
PB says that one stage she threw away the manuscript of this novel in despair, but her husband rescued it from the bin.
Jaggi, Maya. “Pat Barker. Dispatches from the front”. The Guardian, pp. G2: 16 - 19.
18
She said she felt the absence of models for writing fiction...
Health Maya Angelou
At about this time MA suffered a particularly painful instance of race prejudice when she had toothache and a white dentist refused to see her. Her grandmother compelled him to pay for her treatment (by...
Friends, Associates Tillie Olsen
Olsen's friendship with another writer, Alice Walker , survived various fallings-out. It finally ended when Olsen visited China in June 1983 with a party including Walker and Paule Marshall ; the issue was Olsen's monopolizing...
Education Malorie Blackman
MB was shaped by her reading outside school. She never entered a bookshop until she was fourteen, but relied on libraries. Early favourites were C. S. Lewis 's Narnia books, Johanna Spyri 's Heidi books...
Cultural formation Maya Angelou
Born black in the Southern USA and raised mainly in a small and backward, rigidly segregated Arkansas town in which white people systematically victimised blacks (the segregation was so complete that most Black children...
Anthologization Maud Sulter
MS had a conversation with Alice Walker , which was published as Wild Women Don't Get the Blues in Charting the Journey: Writings by Black and Third World Women.
Sulter, Maud. “Wild Women Don’t Get the Blues”. Charting the Journey, edited by Shabnam Grewal et al., Sheba Feminist Publishers, pp. 100-10.
100-10

Timeline

No timeline events available.

Texts

Walker, Alice. The Chicken Chronicles. The New Press, 2011.
Walker, Alice. The Color Purple. Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1982.
Walker, Alice. The Cushion in the Road. The New Press, 2013.
Walker, Alice. The Same River Twice. Scribner, 1996.
Walker, Alice. The Temple of My Familiar. Harcourt, Brace, Jovanich, 1989.
Walker, Alice. The Third Life of Grange Copeland. Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1970.
Walker, Alice. The Way Forward is with a Broken Heart. Random House, 2000.
Walker, Alice. The World Will Follow Joy. The New Press, 2013.
Walker, Alice, and Pratibha Parmar. Warrior Marks. Harcourt Brace, 1993.
Walker, Alice. We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For. New Press, 2006.
Walker, Alice. You Can’t Keep a Good Woman Down. Harcourt, Brace, Jovanovich, 1981.