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Etheridge Knight

 
African American Literature: Etheridge Knight

Knight, Etheridge (1931–1991), poet. In the life and work of Etheridge Knight, the theme of prisons imposed from without (slavery, racism, poverty, incarceration) and prisons from within (addiction, repetition of painful patterns) are countered with the theme of freedom. His poems of suffering and survival, trial and tribute, loss and love testify to the fact that we are never completely imprisoned. Knight's poetry expresses our freedom of consciousness and attests to our capacity for connection to others.

Knight was born on 19 April 1931 in Corinth, Mississippi; he was one of seven children. After having dropped out of school in the eight grade, he joined the army in 1947, saw active duty in Korea, where he suffered a shrapnel wound, and was discharged in 1957. Throughout this time he developed an addiction to drugs and alcohol that caused him to turn to crime to support his habit. While wandering around the United States after his discharge, Knight was arrested for robbery in 1960 and served his sentence in the Indiana State Prison, where by chance Gwendolyn Brooks visited him and encouraged his writing. He started writing regularly, supported by members of the Black Arts movement such as Sonia Sanchez and Dudley Randall, whose Broadside Press published Knight's Poems from Prison in 1968, also the year of his release from prison and his marriage to Sanchez.

Poems from Prison attests to the freedom of consciousness that persists in spite of prison. “He Sees Through Stone” portrays a strong, older man in prison whose vision—ability to think, imagine, and dream—survives even behind the stone walls. “The Idea of Ancestry,” one of Knight's most critically acclaimed pieces, is a cry of yearning for the freedom to be with his family and to have one of his own.

Black Voices from Prison (1970) is an anthology of writings by men in prison that includes all of Knight's earlier poems and “A WASP Woman Visits a Black Junkie in Prison.” In this poem, two people, initially separated by their differences, find common ground when he asks if she has children. The encounter leaves the man touched and softened by the woman, as are many of Knight's male speakers.

The early 1970s were productive years during which Knight gained popularity and recognition across the United States. From 1969 to 1972 Knight held positions at the University of Pittsburgh, the University of Hartford, and Lincoln University. He gave numerous poetry readings and led Free People's Poetry Workshops, which were open to anyone. He received a National Endowment for the Arts grant in 1972 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1974. Still, during this time his marriage to Sanchez ended, and battling his addiction, he periodically admitted himself to veterans hospitals for treatment.

The culmination of these first years out of prison was Belly Song and Other Poems (1973). Now married to Mary Ann McAnally, with whom he had two children, Knight produced a volume that features some of his finest work, including many hauntingly beautiful love poems and “Belly Song,” the poem that gives the volume its name. In this poem the speaker sings of love: all the emotion, pain, memory, and passion of living, which is located in the belly. Belly love comes from the sharing of memories, the common experience of survival.

In December 1978, Knight had a son with his third wife, Charlene Blackburn. Knight's next work, Born of a Woman (1980), presents women as healing, life-giving sources to whom men turn in desire and identification. In “The Stretching of the Belly,” written for his wife, the woman's stretch marks are contrasted with the male speaker's scars: hers are marks of growth and life; his are scars from war, violence, and slavery. The volume ends with “Con/tin/u/way/shun Blues,” a poem that moves from the “I” to the “we” by means of blues rhythms, attesting to the unifying and strengthening power of the blues tradition, which allows us to “keep on keeping on.”

The Essential Etheridge Knight (1986) is divided into five sections, which correspond to his five volumes of poetry. Balanced between poems of prison and freedom, the volume attests to the power of each. Freedom's power is forcefully articulated in “Circling the Daughter,” for his daughter, Tandi, upon her fourteenth year. The speaker urges his daughter to remember her goodness, signified by her birth, belly, and newly round body, and reminds her to look within for the freedom to counteract the outside world of limit. In 1991, Knight died at age fifty-nine from lung cancer, yet through his poetry, he continues to testify to the power of freedom, and human capacity to envision it even while in prison.

Bibliography

  • Patricia Liggins Hill, “‘The Violent Space’: The Function of the New Black Aesthetic in Etheridge Knight's Prison Poetry,” Black American Literature Forum 14.3 (Fall 1980): 115–121.
  • Craig Werner, “The Poet, the Poem, the People: Etheridge Knight's Aesthetic,” Obsidian 7.2–3 (Summer and Winter 1981): 7–17.
  • Etheridge Knight, “A MELUS Interview: Etheridge Knight,” interview by Steven C. Tracy, MELUS 12.2 (Summer 1985): 7–23.
  • Charles H. Rowell, “An Interview with Etheridge Knight,” Callaloo 19:4 (Fall 1996): 967–980.
  • Joyce Ann Joyce, “The Poetry of Etheridge Knight: A Reflection of an African Philosophical/Aesthetic,” Worcester Review 19:1–2 (1998): 105–118; this issue contains a special section on Knight

Cassie Premo

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Black Biography: Etheridge Knight
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poet

Personal Information

Born on April 19, 1931, in Corinth, MS; died of lung cancer on March 10, 1991, in Indianapolis, IN; son of Bushie and Belzora (Cozart) Knight; married Sonia Sanchez (divorced); married Mary Ann McAnally, 1973 (divorced); married Charlene Blackburn; children: (second marriage) Mary Tandiwe, Etheridge Bambata; (third marriage) Isaac Bushie; (stepchildren) Morani Sanchez, Mongou Sanchez, Anita Sanchez
Education: Martin Center University, bachelor of arts, criminal justice, 1990.

Career

Poet. Writer-in-residence, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, 1968-69, University of Hartford, Hartford, CT, 1969-70, and Lincoln University, Jefferson City, MO, 1972; contributor of poems and articles to many magazines and journals, including Black Digest, Essence, Motive, American Report, and American Poetry; Motive, poetry editor, 1969-71; New Letters, contributing editor, 1974.

Life's Work

"This poetry is a major announcement," poet Gwendolyn Brooks, wrote of Etheridge Knight's in the preface to his first volume of poetry, Poems from Prison. Knight's book was published in 1968 by Broadside Press while the author served out a sentence in Indiana State Prison. Although he was in prison, Knight's voice was heard on the outside; black critics and writers acclaimed his poetry as another good example of the powerful truth of blackness in art that the Black Arts Movement, then reaching its height of influence, was promoting. After Knight got out of jail he continued writing, and his poetry became important both to African-American poetry and to the branch of Anglo-American poetry following in the tradition of Walt Whitman.

Knight's poems described prison and the desire for freedom, being male, and the oppression of blacks and the underprivileged. As his work continued into the 1980s he absorbed more African-American, Anglo-American, European, and African literary traditions into a body of work capable of making a connection with black and white readers alike. Knight has earned both Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award nominations for his book Belly Song and Other Poems (1973) and won the praise of such well-known poets as Gwendolyn Brooks, Robert Bly, and Galway Kinnell. Knight enjoyed his greatest success among critics with the publication of Born of a Woman in 1980. He won the 1987 American Book Award for his final collection of poems, The Essential Etheridge Knight.

Etheridge Knight was born in Corinth, Mississippi, on April 19, 1931, to Etheridge "Bushie" and Belzora (Cozart) Knight. He grew up in Paducah, Kentucky, with two brothers and four sisters. There are several accounts of his rough childhood but all of them agree that he dropped out of high school, hung around pool halls, bars, and juke joints, and went off to join the Army, where he served as a medical technician from 1947 to 1951. He fought in Korea where he was wounded by shrapnel. After serving in a non-combat capacity in Guam and Hawaii he returned home in psychological distress over his shrapnel wound, which drove him to take drugs and eventually to commit a robbery to support his habit. The crime landed him in prison from 1960 to 1968. He had a drug problem for much of his life.

Recreated Black Male Experience in Prison

Before he got to prison Knight was an experienced reciter of "toasts"--long, memorized narrative poems, often in rhymed couplets--and he perfected his expertise in this traditional spoken African-American art form while inside prison. "Toasts" enabled Knight to tell of sexual exploits, drug activities, and violent conflicts among a group of known folk figures, using street lingo, drug terms, prison idioms, and obscenities. Toast-telling brought Knight together with others, and the poetry also gave him an identity and an understanding of what poetry could do. By 1963 Knight was already writing poetry for publication and by 1965 he knew what he wanted to do in life.

Despite the suppression of all things creative in prison, Knight developed outside contacts with black poets, writers, and publishers, particularly poets Gwendolyn Brooks, Sonia Sanchez, and Dudley Randall. Randall's small black press, Broadside Press, published Knight's first book of poems, Poems from Prison, in 1968. The poems in the volume are described in Gwendolyn Brooks's preface to the book, in which she wrote, "The poems recreate the conditions that black males experience, especially in prison.... [They] also give pictures of the heroes who emerge from this literal metaphor for the oppression that all blacks suffer; black men like Malcolm X and Hard Rock are heroes because they bring freedom and hope to others living in harsh conditions even if they themselves are destroyed."

"The Idea of Ancestry" from Poems from Prison has been the most praised and the most often anthologized poem from the collection. It has been viewed as one of the best works written about the African-American conception of family history and human interconnectedness. In this poem Knight uses what came to be his signature style: slash marks, commas, colons, unusual spellings, and spacing of words to show how the voice should sound saying the lines. He also combined the vocabulary of the drug culture, black slang, and concrete images to make ancestry come alive in the poem.

Much of Knight's prison poetry, according to Patricia Liggins Hill in Black American Literature Forum, focuses on imprisonment as a form of contemporary enslavement and looks for ways in which one can be free despite incarceration. Time and space are significant in the concept of imprisonment, and Hill commented that "specifically, what Knight relies on for his prison poetry are various temporal/spacial elements which allow him to merge his personal consciousness with the consciousness of Black people." Hill maintained that this merging of consciousness "sets him apart from the other new Black poets ... [who] see themselves as poets/priests ... Knight sees himself as being one with Black people."

Praised for Use of Black Themes

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Knight's poetry was lauded in print primarily by African-American critics and poets like Gwendolyn Brooks and Haki Madhubuti (then Don L. Lee), who praised Knight's incorporation of typically black themes such as ancestry and the destruction of the black man by the system, and his creative use of punctuation, rhythm, and images to create a musical, oral effect in his poetry. After getting out of prison, Knight married Sonia Sanchez and adopted her children. Throughout his life Knight experienced problems with women, and would marry several times.

From 1969 to 1972 Knight lived in freedom as a black poet and held several university positions. He was writer-in-residence at the University of Pittsburgh, and later at the University of Hartford and at Lincoln University in Missouri. Besides being a poet and a teacher, Knight also edited poetry for a magazine titled Motive. Knowledge of his work soon spread, and he received a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1972 and a Guggenheim Fellowship two years later.

In 1973 he divorced Sonia Sanchez and married Mary Ann McAnally, with whom he had two children. That year Broadside Press published a new book of his poems, Belly Song and Other Poems. Knight believed that the root of human feeling is in the belly, where a person initially feels fear, love, joy and pain, and the poetry in the volume describes a variety of such feelings. At the heart of this compilation is Knight's written version of a toast he had learned, titled"Dark Prophecy: I Sing of Shine," about how a black stoker aboard the Titanic saves himself when the ship goes down, resisting all the coaxings of the bigoted world which despises him. In this collection Knight also wrote of ancestors; he experimented with rhythm and uses his own autobiographical material. He celebrated love and the pain of lost love, using his characteristic repetition, spaced lining, slash marks, and punctuation. The love poems are full of images of sexual love, of water, of nature, and celebrate the joining together of a man and woman. This joy contrasts sharply with the bleak, empty world of loss and the death of love. This collection also contains poems which speak of political freedom, freedom from racism, and prison.

Published Born of A Woman

In 1980 Houghton Mifflin published another collection of his poems, titled Born of a Woman, which was made up of previously published poems as well as unpublished new work. The work contains poems which portray pain and evil as well as those which affirm life, including "The Stretching of the Belly," which is dedicated to Knight's third wife, Charlene, and celebrates the giving of birth. In another poem Knight tells of the birth of a black baby boy and the type of milieu he will live in. He ends the volume with "Con/tin/u/way/shun Blues," a poem in which the autobiographical "I" becomes the bluesy voice of a troubled community. In the years before the publication of this volume, Knight lived in Memphis, Tennessee, conducting poetry workshops and collecting toasts for publication by the Center for Southern Folklore.

In 1986 Knight brought out his last volume of poetry, The Essential Etheridge Knight. In addition to working as a poet, Knight continued his education. In 1990 he earned a bachelor's degree in American poetry and criminal justice from Martin Center University in Indianapolis, Indiana. Knight died of lung cancer on March 10, 1991, in Indianapolis, and left behind unpublished poems filled with descriptions of sorrow, loneliness, dissatisfaction, and triumph.

Awards

National Endowment for the Arts grants, 1972 and 1980; National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize nominations, both for Belly Song and Other Poems, 1973; Self-Development Through the Arts grant, for local workshops, 1974; Guggenheim fellowship, 1974; American Book Award, Before Columbus Foundation, for The Essential Etheridge Knight, 1987.

Works

Selected writings

  • (Contributor) For Malcolm, Broadside Press, 1967.
  • Poems from Prison, preface by Gwendolyn Brooks, Broadside Press, 1968.
  • (With others) Voce Negre dal Carcere (anthology), [Laterza, Italy], 1968, original English edition published as Black Voices from Prison, introduction by Roberto Giammanco, Pathfinder Press, 1970.
  • A Poem for Brother/Man (after His Recovery from an O.D.), Broadside Press, 1972.
  • Belly Song and Other Poems, Broadside Press, 1973.
  • Born of a Woman: New and Selected Poems, Houghton Mifflin, 1980.
  • The Essential Etheridge Knight, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1986.
  • Other
  • Work represented in many anthologies, including Norton Anthology of American Poets, Black Poets, A Broadside Treasury, Broadside Poet, and A Comprehensive Anthology of Black Poets.

Further Reading

Books

  • Dictionary of Literary Biography, Volume 41: Afro-American Poets Since 1955, Gale, 1985, pp. 202-211.
  • Discovering Authors, Gale, 1999.
  • The Essential Etheridge Knight, University of Pittsburgh Press, 1986.
  • New Bones: Contemporary Black Writers in America, Prentice Hall, 1995, Chapter 45.
  • Poems from Prison, Broadside Press, 1968, preface and p. 11.
Periodicals
  • Black American Literature Forum, Summer 1981, pp. 77-79.
  • Etheridge Knight, The Academy of American Poets, 1997.
  • Etheridge Knight, The Academy of American Poets, Bedford/St. Martin's, 1998.
On-line
  • www.bedfordstmartins.com/litlinks/poetry/knight.htm.
  • Contemporary Authors Online, Gale Group, 2001; http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/GLD/.
  • http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/quashie/chapter45/.
  • www.poets.org/poets/poets.cfm?prmID=159.

— Alison Carb Sussman

Works: Works by Etheridge Knight
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(1931-1991)

1968Poems from Prison. Wounded in Korea, addicted to drugs and alcohol, and imprisoned for armed robbery in 1960, Knight is encouraged in his writing by a chance meeting with Gwendolyn Brooks in prison and produces this collection of explosive free verse.
1973Belly Song and Other Poems. Knight's collection contains some of his finest work, including "He Sees Through Stone," "Idea of Ancestry," and "Ila, the Talking Drum," which Robert Bly considers one of the best poems of the past fifty years because of its original and intense rhythm.

Wikipedia: Etheridge Knight
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Etheridge Knight (April 19, 1931 – March 10, 1991) was an African-American poet who became a notable poet in 1968 with his debut volume, Poems from Prison. The book recalls in verse his eight-year-long sentence after Etheridge was arrested for robbery in 1960. A prose version was published in Italian as Voce negre dal carcere, and in English as Black Voices from Prison (1970), which includes other prisoners' writings.

Knight was born to a poor family in rural Corinth, Mississippi, in which he was one of seven children. Knight decided to drop out at the age of 16 [1]. At such a young age, he realized that without an education, his opportunities were limited. In his hometown, he could only find menial jobs such as shining shoes and spent much of his time at pool halls. This took an emotional toll on Knight. Desperate to relieve himself of the despair of reality, he slipped into drug addiction. In an attempt to find himself and a purpose in life, Knight decided to join the U.S. Army in 1947. Knight served as a medic in the Korean War until he was discharged from service in 1951, after suffering from a shrapnel wound. After his time in the Army he settled in Indianapolis, Indiana, where he picked up the art of telling toasts, which are traditional, black, oral narrative poems acted out in a theatrical manner. During this time, he still maintained his addiction to heroin.

In 1960, Knight snatched an elderly woman’s purse in order to support his addiction, and was sentenced to serve a ten to twenty-five year term in the Indiana State Prison. Enraged by his lengthy prison sentence, which he believed to be unjust and racist in nature, Knight, during his first year of prison became hostile and belligerent in his ways. However, in the following years of incarceration, he turned to books such as The Autobiography of Malcolm X and the poetry of Langston Hughes. Inspired by them, he redirected his embitterment into the writing of poetry so as to liberate his soul. By drawing from his experience in toasting, Knight developed his verse into a transcribed-oral poetry. The poems he had written during his time in prison were so effective that Dudley Randall, a publisher/poet, published Knight’s first volume of verse, which he called Poems from Prison, and hailed Knight as one of the major poets of the New Black Aesthetic. Other poets such as Amiri Baraka, Don Lee, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Sonia Sanchez aided Knight in obtaining his parole in 1968.

Upon his release from prison in 1968, Knight married poet Sonia Sanchez. However, as a result of his ongoing drug addiction, the marriage did not last long, and they were divorced two years later. He married Mary McNally in 1972, and fathered her two children. They settled in Minneapolis, Minnesota until they separated in 1977. He then resided in Memphis, Tennessee where he received Methadone treatments. He later moved back to Indianapolis where he died of lung cancer on March 10, 1991.

Knight continued to write throughout his post-prison life. Belly Song and Other Poems (1973) dealt with themes of racism and love. Following the publication of this work he received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1974. Knight believed the poet was a "meddler" or intermediary between the poem and the reader. He elaborated on this concept in his 1980 work Born of a Woman. The Essential Etheridge Knight (1986) is a compilation of Knight's work.

Knight taught at the University of Pittsburgh, the University of Hartford, and Lincoln University, before he was forced to stop working due to illness. He also continued to be known as a charismatic poetry reader.

Poetry

  • Poems from Prison 1968
  • Black Voices from Prison (1970)
  • Belly Song and Other Poems (1973)
  • Born of a Woman (1980)
  • The Essential Etheridge Knight (1986)

External links and Further Reading

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

African American Literature. The Concise Oxford Companion to African American Literature. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Black Biography. Contemporary Black Biography. Copyright © 2006 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Works. The Chronology of American Literature, edited by Daniel S. Burt. Copyright © 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Etheridge Knight" Read more