Paule Marshall (b. 1929) is a major contributor to the canons of
African American and Caribbean American literature. In 1959, she
published her first novel, "Brown Girl, Brownstones," and was
quickly recognized as a writer of great talent and insight on
important questions about gender, race, and immigration in American
society. In 1981, the Feminist Press rediscovered her novel and
reprinted it, earning Marshall the informal title of grandmother of
the renaissance of African American women's writing that emerged in
the early 1970s. Over the course of her fifty-year career, Marshall
has published five novels, two collections of short stories,
numerous essays, and a memoir. In recognition of her work, she has
received grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, the National
Endowment for the Arts and, in 1992, the prestigious MacArthur
Fellowship.
"Conversations with Paule Marshall" is the first collection of
her interviews, and as such it provides the first comprehensive
account of the stages of this writer's life. The most recent
conversation took place in 2009 following the publication of her
memoir, "Triangular Road"; the oldest takes readers back to 1971,
just after the publication of her second novel, "The Chosen Place,
the Timeless People." In this collection of interviews, Marshall
discusses the sources of her writing, her involvement in the civil
rights movement, her understanding of the relationship between art
and politics (as framed, in part, by her discussions with Maya
Angelou and Malcolm X), and her evolving understanding of the
relationship between the wide wings of the African diaspora.
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