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Of Althea and Flaxie | 3 | |
Ruby the runaway | 6 | |
Gail | 11 | |
The johnny cake | 13 | |
Cantaloupe | 19 | |
If you black get back | 22 | |
Lesbianism : an act of resistance | 25 | |
Black, brave, and woman, too | 43 | |
The failure to transform : homophobia in the black community | 61 | |
New notes on lesbianism | 81 | |
14th Street was gutted | 91 | |
The woman who raised me | 92 | |
I come to the city | 93 | |
No more encomiums | 94 | |
Vicki and Daphne | 97 | |
Intimacy on luxury | 101 | |
Nothing | 102 | |
The change | 104 | |
We are everywhere | 106 | |
Since my lover left | 107 | |
Living as a lesbian underground : a futuristic fantasy | 108 | |
An exile I have loved | 112 | |
Living as a lesbian on the make | 113 | |
Sexual preference | 114 | |
Kittatinny | 115 | |
Living as a lesbian at 35 | 117 | |
The space in me where Baldwin lives | 119 | |
Silence and invisibility : costly metaphors | 123 | |
Saying the least said, telling the least told : the voices of black lesbian writers | 133 | |
Knowing the danger and going there anyway | 145 | |
... she still wrote out the word Kotex on a torn piece of paper wrapped up in a dollar bill | 155 | |
Party pants | 191 | |
Bulletin | 193 | |
Stuck | 195 | |
Sisters part | 198 | |
Ella takes up the slack | 200 | |
Kitchen mechanics sequence | 202 | |
Frances Michael | 205 | |
Rabbit | 207 | |
High school | 215 | |
No place | 219 | |
The homoerotic other | 221 | |
The everyday life of black lesbian sexuality | 225 | |
Two rich and rounding experiences | 237 | |
Living the texts out : lesbians and the uses of black women's traditions | 247 | |
A great angel | 275 | |
Living as a lesbian underground, ii | 276 | |
Great Garbo | 280 | |
Movement | 281 | |
Passing | 289 | |
Buttons | 290 | |
Interlude | 291 | |
Rondeau | 292 | |
Remember the voyage | 293 | |
Dykes are hard | 294 | |
Living as a lesbian at 45 | 295 | |
Najeeb | 297 | |
Elegy | 298 | |
An old woman muses from her basement | 299 | |
A house of difference : Audre Lorde's legacy to lesbian and gay writers | 301 | |
Transferences and confluences : the impact of the black arts movement on the literacies of black lesbian feminism | 319 | |
Living as a lesbian underground fin de siecle | 361 | |
Bald woman | 362 | |
Billie Holliday | 363 | |
Please read | 364 | |
James Dean longing | 365 | |
Urban epitaphs after 9/11/01 | 367 | |
Dreams of South Africa | 368 | |
A sister's lament as she poses for an AP photograph holding her dead sister's portrait | 372 | |
The days of good looks | 374 | |
Lesbianism, 2000 | 379 | |
Pomo Afro homo vexing of black macho in the age of AIDS | 391 | |
The prong of permanency, a rant | 403 | |
Ecstatic fallacies : the politics of the black storefront | 409 |
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Add The days of good looks, Lauded by luminaries such as Gwendolyn Brooks, Adrienne Rich, and Joy Harjo, among others, the work of African American lesbian poet Cheryl Clarke has spoken on behalf of the black, feminist and gay movements for more than 25 years. Her writing has earned, The days of good looks to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add The days of good looks, Lauded by luminaries such as Gwendolyn Brooks, Adrienne Rich, and Joy Harjo, among others, the work of African American lesbian poet Cheryl Clarke has spoken on behalf of the black, feminist and gay movements for more than 25 years. Her writing has earned, The days of good looks to your collection on WonderClub |