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Wanda Coleman

 

Coleman, Wanda (b. 1946), poet, short fiction writer, and performer. Identifying herself as an “L. A. poet,” Wanda Coleman not only grew up in Los Angeles, California, but also uses that city as her primary urban setting for the raw, imagistically graphic, and politically charged poetry and short stories that she writes. Desiring to “rehumanize the dehumanized,” Coleman focuses upon the lives of the “down and out”; thus she populates her texts with working-class individuals struggling against daily indignities and social outcasts struggling simply to survive. The primary voice represented in her poems is that of the African American woman whose head is bloodied but unbowed, who is just as tough as the harsh city in which she lives.

Born Wanda Evans in Watts to George and Lewana Evans, Coleman found herself drawn to poetry as a young child, and, encouraged by her parents to write, she published several poems by the time she was fifteen. During the 1960s, she became a political activist and, influenced by Ron Karenga's Afrocentric “US” movement, wrote, as she put it, “for the cause.” Later, resisting the rhetoric of political movements, Coleman conceived of her cultural role as that of the artist, not of the political activist or social scientist who felt compelled to be “Wanda the Explainer.” Nevertheless, significantly shaped by the civil rights movement, she continued to write of the disenfranchised and dispossessed, and the themes of racism, sexism, poverty, and marginalization would continue to permeate her work.

Although she resists being defined by any one tradition, Coleman acknowledges that her writing has been influenced by the blues tradition and the music of the African American church as well as the prosody of such poets as Ezra Pound, Edgar Allan Poe, and Charles Olson. Moreover, attesting to the hybrid influences of a multicultural Los Angeles, Coleman's work has also been affected by a wide range of cultural images and sounds—from the visceral works of Los Angeles poets such as Charles Bukowski, to the Latino/a influence of the Southwest, to the rhythmic sounds of Black English vernacular. Despite the demands of her life—raising three children, often juggling more than one job—Coleman has found the time to write and perform her works. Since the late 1970s, Coleman has had eight books published: Art in the Court of the Blue Fag (1977), Mad Dog Black Lady (1979), Images (1983), A War of Eyes and Other Stories (1988), Dicks-boro Hotel and Other Travels (1989), African Sleeping Sickness: Stories and Poems (1990), Heavy Daughter Blues: Poems and Stories (1991), and Hand Dance (1993).

Coleman has received recognition for her work: an Emmy for her writing (1976), a National Endowment for the Arts grant (1981–1982), and a Guggenheim Fellowship for poetry (1984). Coleman won the 1999 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize from the Academy of American Poets for Bathwater Wine (1998). In 1999, she published her first novel, Mambo Hips and Make Believe. Distinguishing herself from other African American writers from the South and the East, Coleman sees herself as a distinctly West Coast writer Despite her ambivalent relationship with Los Angeles, she remains dedicated to depicting the varied lives in the city, giving voice to the dispossessed, making visible the invisible, putting a human face onto anonymous statistics.

Bibliography

  • Tony Magistrale, “Doing Battle with the Wolf: A Critical Introduction to Wanda Coleman's Poetry,” Black American Literature Forum 23 (Fall 1989): 539–554.
  • Wanda Coleman, “Sweet Mama Wanda Tells Fortunes: An Interview with Wanda Coleman,” interview by Tony Magistrale and Patricia Ferreira, Black American Literature Forum 24 (Fall 1990): 491–507.
  • Kathleen K. O’Mara, “Wanda Coleman,” in DLB, vol. 130, American Short Story Writers since World War II, ed. Patrick Meanor, 1993, pp. 82–88

Sandra K. Stanley

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Black Biography: Wanda Coleman
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poet; critic

Personal Information

Born Wanda Evans on November 13, 1946, in Los Angeles, CA; daughter of George and Lewana Evans; married and divorced twice before marrying Austin Straus, a poet; children: Anthony, Tunisia, Ian Wayne Grant
Education: Attended Valley Junior College, Van Nuys, CA; California State University at Los Angeles.
Memberships: PEN international writers' organization.

Career

Peace Corps/Vista, production editor, proofreader, magazine editor, waitress, and assistant recruiter, 1968-75; Days of Our Lives, NBC television, staff writer, 1975-76; medical transcriber and billing clerk, 1979-84; Pacifica Radio network, co-host of poetry program, 1981-1990s; UCLA extension program, fiction instructor, 1989; Los Angeles Times Magazine, columnist, 1992-95; Loyola Marymount University, Fletcher Jones endowed chair in literature and writing, 1994-97; California State University at Long Beach, lecturer in black studies, 1997; Los Angeles Times, contributor, 1990s; City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, fellow, 2003-04.

Life's Work

"Others often use the word 'uncompromising' to describe my work," poet Wanda Coleman told Contemporary Poets. "I find that quite pleasing." Coleman, who has claimed to be the most prolific African-American poet of all time, has written thousands of poems and has read her poetry in public more than 500 times. The thread that ties all her work together is a refusal to accept racism in America; she writes about the shattered landscapes of African-American life that racism has left in its wake. Coleman's long career has illustrated the difficulties African-American writers face in making an independent living, but she has left several strong impressions on the literary map, and she is no stranger to controversy.

A native of Los Angeles who has never left Southern California for long, Wanda Coleman was born Wanda Evans on November 13, 1946. The family was poor. Her father was an ex-boxer whose career had ended with injuries; he later worked for an advertising agency. Her mother was a seamstress and housecleaner who sometimes found work in the homes of Hollywood film stars. Coleman found no enjoyment in school, but she was fascinated by books and writing from the time she was a young girl. She had some poems published in a local newspaper when she was 13.

Held a Wide Variety of Jobs

Coleman attended Valley Junior College in Van Nuys, California, and California State University at Los Angeles, but did not finish degree programs at these schools. She married young and had two children by the time she was 20. Struggling to support her children after divorcing her first husband in 1969, Coleman worked in an amazing variety of jobs from the late 1960s through the early 1980s, working all the while toward the goal of becoming a professional writer. She was, at various times, the editorial coordinator of an arts newsletter (for the Studio Watts organization), a medical secretary, a journalist, a proofreader, a waitress, and a Peace Corps/Vista recruiter.

Working in various creative media during this period, Coleman experimented with fiction, screenwriting, and even dance. Her first short story, "Watching the Sunset," appeared in Negro Digest in 1970, and an early hint of her major talent came when she won an Emmy award for her work as a staff writer on the NBC television soap opera Days of Our Lives for the 1975-76 season. A pamphlet-like chapbook of Coleman's poems was issued by Black Sparrow Press in 1977.

That publishing house, which also issued the works of the unconventional white writer Charles Bukowski (whose works influenced Coleman's own, as did Walt Whitman's poetry), was a good fit for Coleman's energetic, ambitious, sprawling poetry. Black Sparrow continued to issue Coleman's poetry in publications such as Mad Dog Black Lady (1979) and Imagoes (1983). Those works brought Coleman national attention, and she benefited from a National Endowment for the Arts grant in 1981 and a Guggenheim Fellowship for Poetry in 1984. Imagoes was a very personal work that Coleman regarded as a watershed in her career. Coleman had married and divorced a second time before marrying her third husband, the poet Austin Straus, in 1981.

Collaborated with Musicians

Coleman's street reputation was strengthened during the 1980s. She was a tireless reader of her own poetry at public events, and she made a series of recordings for the Freeway and BarKubCo labels that saw her collaborating with progressive musicians such as Exene Cervenka, former lead vocalist of the punk rock band X. Although the term hadn't yet been coined during the rise of Coleman's career, she was a definite forerunner to the "poetry slam" movement that invigorated African-American literary communities with live poetry contests in the 1990s and 2000s. Heavy Daughter Blues, a collection of Coleman's writings from the late 1960s through the mid-1980s, was published by Black Sparrow in 1987.

That book gave many readers a good sampling of Coleman's poetry, which won widespread praise from reviewers for its unquenchable imagination but was sometimes deemed hard to swallow for its grim portrayals of the down-on-their-luck characters who populate Los Angeles's streets. Coleman's poems about love seethed with sexual and violent themes. She continued to produce new work at an astonishing rate--in addition to her many published works she accumulated a collection of over 4,500 rejection slips--and in 1990 the strongly autobiographical African Sleeping Sickness was published; it included short stories and prose poems. One story from that volume, "Where the Sun Don't Shine," won the 1990 Harriette Simpson Arrow Prize for fiction; another, "Today I Am a Homicide in the North of the City," was often reprinted and gave an example of the poet's drawn-from-the-streets subject matter.

Hand Dance (1993) was Coleman's seventh thick book of poetry in 14 years. In addition to this prodigious output of poems, Coleman was also active as a critic and essayist. Native in a Strange Land: Trials and Tremors (1996) collected many of her prose writings. Publishers Weekly noted Coleman's "Swiftian" sense of humor as Coleman asked, "How about a school that teaches the well-heeled the ins and outs of hard-core urban warfare?" Coleman taught writing at a variety of Los Angeles institutions in the 1990s. She also worked as a columnist for the Los Angeles Times Magazine from 1992 to 1995 and occasionally wrote book reviews for the Los Angeles Times, and her reviews were as uncompromising as her poetry.

Stirred Controversy with Angelou Review

A mixed review Coleman wrote in 1997 of Audre Lord's collected works raised some eyebrows, but it was an acid Coleman review of iconic black poet Maya Angelou's A Song Flung Up to Heaven in 2002 that generated a firestorm of controversy. Coleman was banned from a bookstore that had scheduled a reading of poetry from an anthology to which she had contributed, and the Times was flooded with letters. The uproar had the effect of introducing Coleman's name to many readers who hadn't encountered her before, for she had always worked along the fringes of the literary mainstream. "Anyone whose assumes that I derive any satisfaction from [that new attention], other than that of a job well done professionally," Coleman wrote in the on-line magazine Konch, "is grossly mistaken."

None of this slowed Coleman down in the least. Her vast 1998 poetry volume Bathwater Wine, which loosely chronicled the growth of a young black woman to adulthood against a backdrop of poverty and urban violence, won the important Lenore Marshall National Poetry Prize in 1999, and Coleman returned with two more books, Mercurochrome: New Poems (2001) and Ostinato Vamps (2003), the latter published by the University of Pittsburgh Press after the demise of Black Sparrow. She is also the author of a novel, Mambo Hips & Make Believe.

In 2003 and 2004, Coleman became the first literary fellow of the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs. Asked at about that time by the Poetry Society of America whether gender, sexual preference, or ethnicity figured more prominently than being an American in her self-identity as a poet, Coleman responded this way: "As a Usually Het Interracially Married Los Angeles-based African American Womonist Matrilinear Working Class Poor Pink/White Collar College Drop-out Baby Boomer Earth Mother and Closet Smoker Unmolested-by-her-father, I am unable to separate these and, as time progresses, resent having to fit into every niggling PC pigeon hole some retard trendoid academic with a grant or hidden agenda barfs up." Readers looked forward to many more years of words laid on the line by Wanda Coleman.

Awards

Selected: Emmy, best writing in daytime drama, Days of Our Lives, 1976; National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, 1981-82; Guggenheim fellowship, 1984; California Arts Council fellowship, 1989; Harriette Simpson Arrow prize, 1990; Djerassi Foundation, writer's residence, 1990-91; Lenore Marshall National Poetry Prize, for Bathwater Wine, 1999.

Works

Selected works

    Poetry
    • Art in the Court of the Blue Fag, Black Sparrow, 1977.
    • Mad Dog Black Lady, Black Sparrow, 1979.
    • Imagoes, Black Sparrow, 1983.
    • Heavy Daughter Blues: Poems & Stories, Black Sparrow, 1987.
    • The Dicksboro Hotel & Other Travels, Ambrosia, 1989.
    • African Sleeping Sickness: Stories & Poems, Black Sparrow, 1990.
    • Hand Dance, Black Sparrow, 1993.
    • American Sonnets, Woodland Pattern/Light and Dark Press, 1994.
    • Native in a Strange Land: Trials and Tremors, Black Sparrow, 1996.
    • Bathwater Wine, Black Sparrow, 1998.
    • Mercurochrome: New Poems, Black Sparrow, 2001.
    • Ostinato Vamps, University of Pittsburgh, 2003.
    Other
    • (with Jeff Spurrier) 24 Hours in the Life of Los Angeles (photo essay), Alfred Van Der Marck Editions, 1984.
    • A War of Eyes & Other Stories (short stories), Black Sparrow, 1988.
    • Mambo Hips & Make Believe (novel), 1999.
    • Also made 11 recordings for the Freeway, New Alliance, and BarKubCo labels, reissued by Rhino label.

    Further Reading

    Books

    • Contemporary Poets, 7th ed., St. James Press, 2001.
    Periodicals
    • African American Review, Fall 2000, p. 554; Winter 2002, p. 695.
    • Library Journal, November 15, 2003, p. 70.
    • Publishers Weekly, March 29, 1993, p. 46; October 28, 1996, p. 73; June 29, 1998, p. 54.
    • Village Voice, September 4, 2002.
    On-line
    • "Black on Black: Fear & Reviewing in Los Angeles," Ishmael Reed's KONCH Magazine, www.ishmaelreedpub.com/ (September 22, 2004).
    • "Wanda Coleman," Biography Resource Center, www.galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC (September 22, 2004).
    • "Wanda Coleman," Mi Poesias, www.mipoesias.com/April2004/coleman.htm (September 22, 2004).
    • "What Is American about American Poetry?" Poetry Society of America, www.poetrysociety.org/coleman.html (September 22, 2004).

    — James M. Manheim

    Wikipedia: Wanda Coleman
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    Replace this image female.svg

    Wanda Coleman (birth name, Wanda Evans) (born November 13, 1946) is an American poet.[1][2] She is known as "the L.A. Blueswoman," and "the unofficial poet laureate of Los Angeles."[citation needed]

    Contents

    Biography

    Coleman was born Wanda Evans, and grew up in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles during the 1960s. She has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, The NEA, and the California Arts Council (in fiction and in poetry). She was the first C.O.L.A. literary fellow (Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, 2003). Her many honors include an Emmy in Daytime Drama writing, The 1999 Lenore Marshall Prize (for "Bathwater Wine"), and a nomination for the 2001 National Book Awards (for "Mercurochrome"). She was a finalist for California poet laureate (2005).

    Her quotes

    Like Wallace Stegner, I am in the 'universal' tradition of writers who concern themselves with The Truth -- never mind that it is apt to hurt someone, in some way, most likely me. — From The Riot Inside Me: More Trials & Tremors

    Her works

    • "Jazz and Twelve O'Clock Tales" Godine/Black Sparrow Books 2008.
    • "The Riot Inside Me: More Trials & Tremors" David R. Godine Publisher 2005.
    • "Wanda Coleman--Greatest Hits: 1966-2003" Pudding House Publications.
    • "Ostinato Vamps" Pitt Poetry Series, 2003-2004.
    • "Mercurochrome" Black Sparrow 2001, National Book Awards finalist.
    • "Mambo Hips and Make Believe: A Novel" Black Sparrow 1999.
    • "Bathwater Wine" Black Sparrow 1998.
    • "Native In a Strange Land: Trials & Tremors" Black Sparrow 1996.
    • "American Sonnets" Woodland Pattern 1994.
    • "Hand Dance" Black Sparrow 1993.
    • "African Sleeping Sickness: Stories & Poems Black Sparrow 1990.
    • "A War of Eyes and Other Stories" Black Sparrow 1988.
    • "Heavy Daughter Blues: Poems & Stories 1968-1986" Black Sparrow 1987.
    • "Imagoes" Black Sparrow 1983.
    • "Mad Dog Black Lady" Black Sparrow 1979.

    References

    Critical articles about or featuring Coleman include:

    • "Revising Western Criticism Through Wanda Coleman," essay by Krista Comer; Western American Quarterly Journal of the Western Literature Association, Vol. XXXIII, No. 4., Utah State University, Dept. of English, Logan UT, Winter 1999.
    • "Literature and Race in Ls Angeles," by Julian Murphet, Cambride University Press, 2001.
    • "AMERICAN WRITERS: A Collection of Literary Biographies," Jay Parini, Editor, article by Tony Magistrale (perhaps the only in-depth authority on Coleman, having written and interviewed her in the late 80s), 2002.
    • "City of Poems: The Lyric Voice in Los Angeles Since 1990," by Laurence Goldstein, from THE MISREAD CITY: New Literary Los Angeles, Dana Gioia and Scott Timberg, Editors, Red Hen Press, 2003.
    • "What Saves Us" interview of Coleman by Priscilla Ann Brown, Callaloo Vol. 26, No.3, Dept. of English, Texas A & M University, 2003.
    • "Wanda Coleman" biographical essay, A-Z of African American Writers, Philip Bader, Editor, Facts-on-File, NY, 2004.
    • "Wanda Coleman," cover and interview by Jeff Jansen, Chiron Review, Issue 79, Summer 2005.
    • "Wanda Coleman," featured poet in Quercus Review #6, Sam Pierstorff, Editor, Dept. of English, Modesto Junior College, California, 2006.

    —While critically acclaimed for her creative writing, Coleman's greatest notoriety came as a result of an unfavorable review she wrote in the April 14, 2002 edition of The Los Angeles Times Book Review of Maya Angelou's book, A Song Flung Up to Heaven. Coleman found the book to be "small and inauthentic, without ideas wisdom or vision". There was a huge outpouring some positive and much negative, which resulted in Coleman's invitation to certain events being cancelled. Her account of this incident appeared as an essay in the August 29, 2002 edition of The Nation.

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    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
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