Ann duCille, "The Mark of Zora: Reading between
the Lines of Legend and Legacy" (page 6 of
7)
Hemenway, whose exquisitely researched literary biography was not
published until 1977, may have sent Walker to Fort Pierce four years
earlier, but it was "Looking for Zora"—the article and the effort:
that is, the recovery of Hurston as a project of black feminist literary
historiography—that became the blueprint for the canon
construction and tradition building that would dominate the rest of the
1970s and much of the 1980s.
Although figuratively motherless writers, scholars, and critics had
been following maternal dust tracks throughout the decade, the quest for
both a literary matriarch and a matrilineage was most fully articulated
in 1977 by Barbara Smith in her pivotal essay "Toward a Black Feminist
Criticism," which first appeared in the lesbian feminist literary
magazine Conditions: Two. Writing from what she described as a
black lesbian feminist perspective, Smith argued for a critical practice
that assumes the interrelatedness of racial and sexual ideology and the
existence of an identifiable tradition of black women writers, glued
together by the authors' shared lived experience, their "common
approaches to the act of creating literature," and "their use of
specifically black female language."[8]
No maternal ancestor fit this new black feminist ideal quite as
neatly as Hurston, whose prose brimmed with the authentic black female
language and traditional black female activities—rootworking,
herbal medicine, conjure, midwifery—that Smith cited in her essay as
emblems of a black feminist literary continuum. Smith also asserted that
a black feminist critic should "think and write out of her own
identity."[9] Williams
and Walker were hardly alone in finding shades of
their own country selves in Hurston's most memorable character, Janie
Crawford, who began to take on not only a heroic stature but also a kind
of "every-woman" status in the emerging black feminist literary
criticism.
Once critical of the term and its white female practitioners and
theorists, this canon building and its attendant criticism by the turn
into the 1980s began to announce itself as overtly feminist, due in no
small measure, I would argue, to Barbara Smith's delineation of what
a black women's critical praxis should look, act, and sound like in "Toward a Black Feminist
Criticism." As Cheryl Wall has pointed out, Smith's critical manifesto
gave name, shape, and substance to the perspective from which young
black women artists and intellectuals had been writing and thinking
since the late 1960s and early 1970s.[10] Additionally, in its insistence
on a single black women's literary tradition, held together by shared
black female experience and uniquely black female language, Smith's
essay helped direct more attention toward Zora Neale Hurston. The
publication of Hemenway's biography, also in 1977; the reissuing of
Their Eyes Were Watching God in 1978; and the appearance of
Walker's edited collection I Love Myself When I Am Laughing in
1979 not only brought Hurston back into print, they also worked further
to affirm and confirm her as the not-so-long-lost foremother of
contemporary black women writers and the cornerstone of a black feminist
literary tradition that, ironically, sometimes seemed to reach back only
as far as Janie Crawford's front porch.
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