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Born | Yolande Cornelia Giovanni Jr. June 7, 1943 Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S. |
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Died | December 9, 2024 (aged 81) Blacksburg, Virginia, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Education | Fisk University (BA) University of Pennsylvania Columbia University |
Period | 1968–2022 |
Partner | Virginia C. Fowler |
Children | 1 |
Website | |
nikki-giovanni |
Yolande Cornelia "Nikki" Giovanni Jr.[1][2] (June 7, 1943 – December 9, 2024) was an American poet, writer, commentator, activist and educator.
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Yolande Cornelia "Nikki" Giovanni Jr.[1][2] (June 7, 1943 – December 9, 2024) was an American poet, writer, commentator, activist and educator. One of the world's most well-known African-American poets,[2] her work includes poetry anthologies, poetry recordings, and nonfiction essays, and covers topics ranging from race and social issues to children's literature. She won numerous awards, including the Langston Hughes Medal and the NAACP Image Award. She was nominated for a 2004 Grammy Award for her poetry album, The Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection. Additionally, she was named as one of Oprah Winfrey's 25 "Living Legends".[2] Giovanni was a member of The Wintergreen Women Writers Collective.[3]
Giovanni gained initial fame in the late 1960s as one of the foremost authors of the Black Arts Movement. Influenced by the Civil Rights Movement and Black Power Movement of the period, her early work provides a strong, militant African-American perspective, leading one writer to dub her the "Poet of the Black Revolution".[2] During the 1970s, she began writing children's literature, and co-founded a publishing company, NikTom Ltd, to provide an outlet for other African-American women writers. Over subsequent decades, her works discussed social issues, human relationships, and hip hop. Poems such as "Knoxville, Tennessee" and "Nikki-Rosa" have been frequently re-published in anthologies and other collections.[4]
Giovanni received numerous awards and holds 27 honorary degrees from various colleges and universities. She was also given the key to over two dozen cities. Giovanni was honored with the NAACP Image Award seven times. One of her more unique honors was having a South America bat species, Micronycteris giovanniae, named after her in 2007.[5]
Giovanni was proud of her Appalachian roots and worked to change the way the world views Appalachians and Affrilachians.[6]
Giovanni taught at Queens College, Rutgers, and Ohio State, and was a University Distinguished Professor at Virginia Tech until September 1, 2022. After the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, she delivered a chant-poem at a memorial for the shooting victims.[7]
Life and work
[edit]Yolande Cornelia "Nikki" Giovanni Jr. was born in Knoxville, Tennessee,[7] to Yolande Cornelia Sr. and Jones "Gus" Giovanni. Soon after her birth, the family moved to Cincinnati, Ohio where her parents worked at Glenview School. In 1948, the family moved to Wyoming, Ohio, and sometime in those first three years, Giovanni's sister, Gary, began calling her "Nikki". In 1958, Giovanni returned to Knoxville to live with her grandparents and attend Austin High School.[4] In 1960, she began her studies at her grandfather's alma mater, Fisk University in Nashville, Tennessee, as an "Early Entrant", which meant that she could enroll in college without having finished high school first.[8]
She immediately clashed with the then-Dean of Women and was expelled after neglecting to obtain the required permission from the Dean to leave campus and travel home for Thanksgiving break. Giovanni moved back to Knoxville, where she worked at a Walgreens drug store and helped care for her nephew, Christopher. In 1964, Giovanni spoke with the new Dean of Women at Fisk University, Blanche McConnell Cowan, who urged her to return to Fisk that fall. While at Fisk, Giovanni edited a student literary journal (titled Élan), reinstated the campus chapter of SNCC (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee), and published an essay in Negro Digest on gender questions in the Movement.[9] In 1967, she graduated with honors with a B.A. degree in history.
Soon after graduation, she suffered the loss of her grandmother, Louvenia Watson, and turned to writing to cope with the death. These poems would later be included in her collection Black Feelings, Black Talk. In 1968, Giovanni attended a semester at University of Pennsylvania School of Social Work toward an MSW and then moved to New York City. She briefly attended Columbia University School of the Arts toward an MFA in poetry and privately published Black Feeling, Black Talk.[10] In 1969, Giovanni began teaching at Livingston College of Rutgers University. She was an active member of the Black Arts Movement beginning in the late 1960s. In 1969, she gave birth to Thomas Watson Giovanni, her only child.[9]
After the birth of her son, Giovanni was accused of setting a bad example because there were not many single moms at that time. Giovanni noted that the birth of her son helped her to realize that children have different interests and require different content than adults. This realization led her to write six children's books.[11]
In 1970, she began making regular appearances on the television program Soul!, an entertainment/variety/talk show that promoted black art and culture and allowed political expression. Soul! hosted important guests such as Muhammad Ali, James Baldwin, Jesse Jackson, Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier, Gladys Knight, Miriam Makeba, and Stevie Wonder. (In addition to being a "regular" on the show, Giovanni for several years helped design and produce episodes.) She published multiple poetry anthologies, children's books, and released spoken word albums from 1973 to 1987.[9]
In 1987, Giovanni was recruited by her partner and eventual wife Virginia Fowler to teach creative writing and literature at Virginia Tech.[12] There, Giovanni later became a University Distinguished Professor, before retiring in 2022.[13][14] She received the NAACP Image Award several times, received 20 honorary doctorates and various other awards, including the Rosa Parks and the Langston Hughes Award for Distinguished Contributions to Arts and Letters.[7] She also holds the key to several different cities, including Dallas, Miami, New York City, and Los Angeles.[15] She was a member of the Prince Hall Order of the Eastern Star, she received the Life Membership and Scroll from the National Council of Negro Women, and was an Honorary Member of Delta Sigma Theta sorority.
Giovanni was diagnosed with lung cancer in the early 1990s and underwent numerous surgeries. Her book Blues: For All the Changes: New Poems, published in 1999, contains poems about nature and her battle with cancer. In 2002, Giovanni spoke in front of NASA about the need for African Americans to pursue space travel, and later published Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea: Poems and Not Quite Poems, which dealt with similar themes.[10]
She was also honored for her life and career by the HistoryMakers, along with being the first person to receive the Rosa L. Parks Women of Courage Award. She was awarded the Presidential Medal of Honor from Dillard University in 2010.[9] In 2015, Giovanni was named one of the Library of Virginia's "Virginia Women in History" for her contributions to poetry, education, and society.[16]
In 2020, Giovanni gave an extended interview to Bryan Knight's Tell A Friend Podcast where she gave an assessment of her life and legacy.[17]
Giovanni released a new album, The Gospel According to Nikki Giovanni, on February 8, 2022.[18]
She is the subject of a documentary film entitled Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project, directed by Joe Brewster and Michèle Stephenson, which premiered at and won the U.S. Grand Jury Prize for Documentary at the 2023 Sundance Film Festival.[19] [20] The documentary features Giovanni's son and granddaughter, as well as Giovanni's spouse Virginia Fowler, a fellow academic and author.[21][22]
Virginia Tech shooting
[edit]Seung-Hui Cho, a mass murderer who killed 32 people in the Virginia Tech shooting on April 16, 2007, was a student in one of Giovanni's poetry classes. Describing him as "mean" and "menacing", she approached the department chair to have Cho taken out of her class, and said she was willing to resign rather than continue teaching him. Cho was removed from her class in 2005.[23] After the massacre, Giovanni stated that, upon hearing of the shooting, she immediately suspected that Cho might be the shooter.[23]
Giovanni was asked by Virginia Tech president Charles Steger to give a convocation speech at the April 17 memorial service for the shooting victims (she was asked by Steger at 5:00 pm on the day of the shootings, giving her less than 24 hours to prepare the speech). She expressed that she usually feels very comfortable delivering speeches, but worried that her emotion would get the best of her.[24] On April 17, 2007, at the Virginia Tech Convocation commemorating the April 16 massacre,[24] Giovanni closed the ceremony with a chant poem, intoning:
Her speech also sought to express the idea that really terrible things happen to good people: "I would call it, in terms of writing, in terms of poetry, it's a laundry list. Because all you're doing is: This is who we are, and this is what we think, and this is what we feel, and this is why – you know?... I just wanted to admit, you know, that we didn't deserve this, and nobody does. And so I wanted to link our tragedy, in every sense, you know – we're no different from anything else that has ...."[24]
She thought that ending with a thrice-repeated "We will prevail" would be anticlimactic, and she wanted to connect back with the beginning, for balance. So, shortly before going onstage, she added a closing: "We are Virginia Tech."[24] Her performance received a 54-second standing ovation from the over-capacity audience in Cassell Coliseum, including then-President George W. Bush.[28]
Later life and death
[edit]Giovanni announced her retirement from Virginia Tech in September 2022, having taught there for 35 years.[29] She was conferred the title of University Distinguished Professor Emerita by the university in December 2022.[30]
On December 9, 2024, Giovanni died of complications from lung cancer in a Blacksburg, Virginia hospital. She was 81.[31][32]
Writing
[edit]The Civil Rights Movement and Black Power movements inspired her early poetry, which was collected in Black Feeling, Black Talk (1968), which sold over ten thousand copies in its first year; in Black Judgement (1968), selling six thousand copies in three months; and in Re: Creation (1970). All three of these early works aided in establishing Giovanni as a new voice for African Americans.(30) In "After Mecca": Women Poets and the Black Arts Movement, Cheryl Clarke cites Giovanni as a woman poet who became a significant part of the Civil Rights and Black Power Movement.[33] Giovanni was commonly praised as one of the best African-American poets emerging from the 1960s Black Power and Black Arts Movements.[34] Her early poems that were collected in the late 1960s and early 1970s are seen as radical as and more militant than her later work. Her poetry is described as being "politically, spiritually, and socially aware".[34] Evie Shockley describes Giovanni as "epitomizing the defiant, unapologetically political, unabashedly Afrocentric, BAM ethos".[35] Her work is described as conveying "urgency in expressing the need for Black awareness, unity, [and] solidarity." Likewise, Giovanni's early work has been considered to be "polemic" and "incendiary".[36] Examples of poems in which she vehemently advocated for change include "The True Import of Present Dialogue Black vs. Negro" (1968), "Poem for Black Boys" (1968) and "A Litany for Peppe" (1970).
Not only did Giovanni write about racial equality, but she also advocated for gender equality, as well. In fact, Odon states that "Giovanni's realignment of female identity with sexuality is crucial to the burgeoning feminist movement within the black community."[37] In the poem, "Revolutionary Dreams" (1970), Giovanni discusses gender and objectification. She writes, "Woman doing what a woman/Does when she's natural/I would have a revolution" (lines 14–16). Another example of a poem that encourages sexual equality is "Woman Poem" (1968). In "Woman Poem", Giovanni shows that the Black Arts Movement and racial pride were not as liberating for women as they were for men (Virginia Fowler, Introduction to the Collected Works of Nikki Giovanni). In "Woman Poem", Giovanni describes how pretty women become sex objects "and no love/or love and no sex if you're fat/get back fat black woman be a mother/grandmother strong thing but not woman."[38]
Giovanni took pride in being a "Black American, a daughter, mother, and a Professor of English".[34] Giovanni was also known for her use of African-American Vernacular English.[39] She wrote more than two dozen books, including volumes of poetry, illustrated children's books, and three collections of essays. Her work is said to speak to all ages, and she strived to make her work easily accessible and understood by both adults and children. Her writing, heavily inspired by African-American activists and artists,[39][40] also reflects the influences of issues of race, gender, sexuality, and the African-American family.[34] Her book Love Poems (1997) was written in memory of Tupac Shakur, and she stated that she would "rather be with the thugs than the people who are complaining about them."[41] Additionally, in 2007 she wrote a children's picture book titled Rosa, which centers on the life of Civil Rights leader Rosa Parks. In addition to this book reaching number three on the New York Best Seller list, it also received the Caldecott Honors Award, and its illustrator, Brian Collier, received the Coretta Scott King Award.[42]
Giovanni's poetry reached more readership through her active engagement with live audiences. She gave her first public reading at the New York City jazz spot, Birdland.[43] Her public expression of "oppression, anger, and solidarity"[43] as well as her political activism allowed her to reach more than just the poetic circles. After the birth of her son in 1969, Giovanni recorded several of her poems with a musical backdrop of jazz and gospel. She began to travel all around the world and speak and read to a wider audience. Even though Giovanni's earlier works were known to carry a militant, revolutionary tone, Giovanni communicated "a global sense of solidarity amongst oppressed peoples in the world" in her travels.[43] It is in this sense of human unity in which Giovanni aligned herself with the beliefs of Martin Luther King Jr. Like King, Giovanni believes a unified, collective government must be made up of the everyday, ordinary citizen, regardless of race, ethnicity, or gender.[43] In the 1970s and '80s her popularity as a speaker increased even more. In 1972 Giovanni interviewed Muhammad Ali on Soul![44]
Giovanni was often interviewed regarding themes pertaining to her poetry such as gender and race. In an interview entitled "I am Black, Female, Polite", Peter Bailey questions her regarding the role of gender and race in the poetry she writes.[45] Bailey specifically addresses the critically acclaimed poem "Nikki-Rosa," and questions whether it is reflective of the poet's own childhood and her experiences in her community. In the interview, Giovanni stresses that she did not like constantly reading the trope of the black family as a tragedy and that "Nikki-Rosa" demonstrates the experiences that she witnessed in her communities.[45] For example, Giovanni writes about her happy childhood as: "Black love is Black wealth and they'll/probably talk about my hard childhood/and never understand that/all the while I was quite happy" (lines 30–33).[46] Specifically, the poem deals with black folk culture and touches on such gender, race, and social issues as alcoholism and domestic violence and not having an indoor bathroom.[47]
Giovanni's poetry in the late 1960s and early 1970s addressed black womanhood and black manhood among other themes. In a book she co-wrote with James Baldwin entitled A Dialogue, the two authors speak openly and frankly about the status of the black male in the household. Baldwin challenges Giovanni's opinion on the representation of black women as the "breadwinners" in the household. Baldwin states: "A man is not a woman. And whether he's wrong or right... Look, if we're living in the same house and you're my wife or my woman, I have to be responsible for that house."[42] Conversely, Giovanni recognizes the black man's strength, whether or not he is "responsible" for the home or economically advantaged. The interview makes it clear that regardless of who is "responsible" for the home, the black woman and the black man should be dependent on one another. In a 1972 Soul! interview with Mohammed Ali, Giovanni uses her popularity as a speaker to a broader audience to read some of her essay "Gemini" from her book Gemini. In the excerpt from that essay, Giovanni intones, "we are born men and women...we need some happiness in our lives, some hope, some love...I really like to think a black, beautiful loving world is possible."[44] Such themes appeared throughout her early poetry which focused on race and gender dynamics in the black community.[42]
Giovanni tours nationwide and frequently speaks out against hate-motivated violence.[47] At a 1999 Martin Luther King Day event, she recalled the 1998 murders of James Byrd Jr. and Matthew Shepard: "What's the difference between dragging a black man behind a truck in Jasper, Texas, and beating a white boy to death in Wyoming because he's gay?"[48]
Those Who Ride the Night Winds (1983) acknowledged black figures. Giovanni collected her essays in the 1988 volume Sacred Cows... and Other Edibles. Her later works include Acolytes, a collection of 80 new poems, and On My Journey Now. Acolytes was her first published volume since her 2003 Collected Poems. The work is a celebration of love and recollection directed at friends and loved ones, and it recalls memories of nature, theater, and the glories of children. However, Giovanni's fiery persona still remains a constant undercurrent in Acolytes, as some of the most serious verse links her own life struggles (being a black woman and a cancer survivor) to the wider frame of African-American history and the continual fight for equality.
Giovanni's collection Bicycles: Love Poems (2009) is a companion work to her 1997 Love Poems. Both works touch on the deaths of her mother, her sister, and those massacred on the Virginia Tech campus. "Tragedy and trauma are the wheels" of the bicycle. The first poem ("Blacksburg Under Siege: 21 August 2006") and the last poem ("We Are Virginia Tech") reflect this. Giovanni chose the title of the collection as a metaphor for love itself, "because love requires trust and balance."[49]
In Chasing Utopia: A Hybrid (2013), Giovanni describes falling off of a bike and her mother saying, "Come here, Nikki and I will pick you up." She explained that it was comforting to hear her mother say this, and that "it took me the longest to realize – no, she made me get up myself."[50] Chasing Utopia continues as a hybrid (poetry and prose) work about food as a metaphor and as a connection to the memory of her mother, sister, and grandmother. The theme of the work is love relationships.[51]
In 2004, Giovanni was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album at the 46th Annual Grammy Awards for her album The Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection. This was a collection of poems that she read against the backdrop of gospel music.(29) She also featured on the track "Ego Trip by Nikki Giovanni" on Blackalicious's 2000 album Nia. In November 2008, a song cycle of her poems, Sounds That Shatter the Staleness in Lives by Adam Hill, was premiered as part of the Soundscapes Chamber Music Series in Taos, New Mexico.
She was commissioned by National Public Radio's All Things Considered to create an inaugural poem for President Barack Obama. The poem, entitled "Roll Call: A Song of Celebration", ends with the following enthusiastic, optimistic three lines: "Yes We Can/Yes We Can/Yes We Can".[52] Giovanni read poetry at the Lincoln Memorial as a part of the bi-centennial celebration of Lincoln's birth on February 12, 2009.[53]
Giovanni was part of the 2016 Writer's Symposium by the Sea at Loma Nazarene University.[54] The University of California Television (UCTV) published the readings of Giovanni at the symposium. In October 2017 Giovanni published her newest collection, A Good Cry: What We Learn from Tears and Laughter. This collection includes poems that pay homage to the greatest influences on her life who have passed away, including close friend Maya Angelou who died in 2014.[55] Giovanni often reads from her books. In one reading she shares her poem "I Married My Mother". In 2017, Giovanni presented at a TEDx event. Here she read the poem "My Sister and Me". She called herself and her sister "two little chocolate girls". After reading the poems she states, "Sometimes you write a poem because damnit, you want to."[56]
During the 2020 United States presidential election, Giovanni appeared in a campaign ad for Joe Biden, reading her poem "Dream".[57]
Awards and recognition
[edit]Personal awards
[edit]- Keys to more than two dozen American cities, including New York, Miami, Los Angeles, and New Orleans
- State Historical markers in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Lincoln Heights, Ohio
- National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship (1968)[58]
- Harlem Cultural Council (1969)[58]
- Woman of the Year, Ebony Magazine (1970)[58]
- Woman of the Year, Mademoiselle magazine (1971)[58]
- Woman of the Year, Ladies' Home Journal (1972)[58]
- National Association of Radio and Television Announcers Award for Best Spoken Word Album, for Truth Is on Its Way (1972)[58]
- Life Membership & Scroll, National Council of Negro Women (1973)
- Woman of the Year, Cincinnati YWCA (1983)[59]
- Induction in the Ohio Women's Hall of Fame (1985)[59]
- Outstanding Woman of Tennessee (1985)
- Duncanson Artist in Residence, The Taft Museum (1986)[59]
- The Post-Corbett Award (1986)[58][59]
- Ohioana Library Award for Sacred Cows (1988)[58]
- Cecil H. and Ida Green Honors Chair, Texas Christian University (1991)[59]
- Hill Visiting Professor, University of Minnesota (1993)[59]
- Tennessee Writer's Award, The Nashville Banner (1994)[58]
- Tennessee Governor's Award in the Humanities (1996)[59]
- Langston Hughes Award for Distinguished Contributions to Arts and Letters, City College of New York (1996)[59]
- Artist-in-Residence. The Philadelphia Clef Club of Jazz and Performing Arts (1996)[59]
- Contributor's Arts Award, The Gwendolyn Brooks Center for Black Literature and Creative Writing (1996)[58]
- Living Legacy Award, Juneteenth Festival of Columbus, Ohio (1998)[58][59]
- Distinguished Visiting Professor, Johnson & Wales University (1998)[59]
- Appalachian Medallion Award, University of Charleston (1998)[58]
- Cincinnati Bi-Centennial Honoree (1998)[59]
- Tennessee Governor's Award in the Arts (1998)[59]
- National Literary Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent, the Gwendolyn Brooks Center of Chicago State University (1998)[58]
- Inducted into The Literary Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent (1999)
- United States Senate Certificate of Commendation (2000)
- 2000 Council of Ideas, The Gihon Foundation (2000)
- Virginia Governor's Award for the Arts (2000)[58]
- Rosa Parks Women of Courage Award, first recipient (2002)[58][59]
- The SHero Award for Lifetime Achievement (2002)[59]
- Inducted into Phi Beta Kappa, Delta of Tennessee chapter, Fisk University (2003)[59]
- The East Tennessee Writers Hall of Fame Award (2004)
- Finalist, Best Spoken Word Grammy (2004)
- Named one of Oprah Winfrey's 25 Living Legends (2005)[60]
- Poet-In-Residence, Walt Whitman Birthplace Association Award (2005)
- Child Magazine Best Children's Book of the Year (2005)
- John Henry "Pop" Lloyd Humanitarian Award (2005)
- ALC Lifetime Achievement Award (2005)[59]
- Delta Sigma Theta sorority (Honorary Member) (2006)
- Caldecott Honor Book Award (2006)
- Carl Sandburg Literary Award (2007)
- National Council of Negro Women Appreciation Award (2007)
- Legacy Award, National Alumni Council United Negro College Fund (2007)
- Legends and Legacies Award (2007)
- Women of Power Legacy Award (2008)
- National Parenting Publications Gold Award (2008)
- Sankofa Freedom Award (2008)
- American Book Award honoring outstanding literary achievement from the diverse spectrum of the American literary community (2008)
- Literary Excellence Award (2008)
- Excellence in Leadership Award from Dominion Power (2008)
- Ann Fralin Award, Taubman Museum of Art (2009)[61]
- Martin Luther King Jr. Award for Dedication and Commitment to Service (2009)[62]
- Art Sanctuary's Lifetime Achievement Award (2010)
- Presidential Medal of Honor, Dillard University (2010)
- Affrilachian Award, University of Kentucky (2011)[63]
- Library of Virginia's Literary Lifetime Achievement Award (2016)
- Maya Angelou Lifetime Achievement Award (2017)[64]
- Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize (2022)[65]
Awarded works
[edit]Year | Award | Category | Work | Result | Ref | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1973 | National Book Award | Gemini | Nominated | [58] | ||
1996 | Parents' Choice Award | The Sun Is So Quiet | Won | [58][59] | ||
1998 | Children's Reading Roundtable of Chicago Award | Vacation Time | Won | [58][59] | ||
NAACP Image Awards | Love Poems | Won | [58] | |||
1999 | NAACP Image Awards | Blues: For All the Changes | Won | [58] | ||
2003 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Literary Work – Fiction | Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea | Won | [58] | |
American Library Association's Black Caucus Award | Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea | Won | [58][59] | |||
2004 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Literary Work – Fiction | The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni | Finalist | ||
2008 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Literary Work – Poetry | Acolytes | Won | ||
2009 | Carter G. Woodson Book Award | Elementary | Lincoln and Douglass: An American Friendship | Won | [66] | |
Moonbeam Children's Book Awards | Children's Poetry | Hip Hop Speaks to Children | Silver Award | [67] | ||
NAACP Image Awards | Won | |||||
2010 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Literary Work – Poetry | Bicycles | Won | ||
2011 | NAACP Image Awards | Outstanding Literary Work – Poetry | 100 Best African American Poems | Won |
Eponym
[edit]Giovanni's Big-Eared Bat, also known as Micronycteris giovanniae, was named in her honor in 2007. The bat is found in western Ecuador and the naming was given "in recognition of her poetry and writings".[68]
Works
[edit]Poetry collections
[edit]- Black Feeling, Black Talk (1968)[69]
- Black Judgement (1968)[70]
- Re: Creation (1970)[70]
- Black Feeling, Black Talk/Black Judgement (contains Black Feeling, Black Talk and Black Judgement) (1970)[70]
- My House (1972)[70]
- The Women and The Men (1975)[71]
- Cotton Candy on a Rainy Day (1978)[70]
- Woman (1978)
- Those Who Ride The Night Winds (1983)[70]
- Knoxville, Tennessee (1994)[70]
- The Selected Poems of Nikki Giovanni (1996)[72]
- Love Poems (1997)[70]
- Blues: For All the Changes (1999)[73]
- Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea: Poems and Not Quite Poems (2002)
- The Prosaic Soul of Nikki Giovanni (2003)
- The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni: 1968-1998 (2003)[70]
- Acolytes (2007)
- Bicycles: Love Poems (2009) (William Morrow)[70]
- 100 Best African American Poems (2010) [editor] (Sourcebooks MediaFusion)[70]
- Chasing Utopia: A Hybrid (2013) (HarperCollins)[70]
- A Good Cry: What We Learn From Tears and Laughter (2017) (William Morrow)
- Make Me Rain (2020)
Children's books
[edit]- Spin a Soft Black Song (1971)[70]
- Ego-Tripping and Other Poems For Young People (1973)[70]
- Vacation Time: Poems for Children (1980)[70]
- Ego-Tripping and Other Poems for Young People Revised Edition (1993)
- The Genie in The Jar (1996)
- The Sun Is So Quiet (1996)[70]
- The Girls in the Circle (Just for You!) (2004)
- Rosa* (2005)
- Poetry Speaks to Children: A Celebration of Poetry with a Beat (2005) [advisory editor] (Sourcebooks)
- Lincoln and Douglass: An American Friendship (2008)[70]
- Hip Hop Speaks to Children: A Celebration of Poetry with a Beat (2008) (Sourcebooks)
- The Grasshopper's Song: An Aesop's Fable (2008)
- I Am Loved (2018)
- A Library (2022) Illustrated by Erin K. Robinson
Discography
[edit]- Truth Is On Its Way (Right-On Records, 1971)[74]
- Like a Ripple on a Pond (Niktom, 1973)
- The Way I Feel (Niktom, 1975)
- The Reason I Like Chocolate (Folkways Records, 1976)[74]
- Legacies: The Poetry of Nikki Giovanni (Folkways, 1976)[74]
- Cotton Candy on a Rainy Day (Folkways, 1978)[74]
- Nikki Giovanni and the New York Community Choir* (Collectibles, 1993)[74]
- Every Tone A Testimony (Smithsonian Folkways, 2001)[74]
- The Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection (2002)[74]
- The Gospel According To Nikki Giovanni (Solid Jackson, 2022) with Javon Jackson
Other
[edit]- (Editor) Night Comes Softly: An Anthology of Black Female Voices, Medic Press (1970)[75]
- Gemini: An Extended Autobiographical Statement on My First Twenty-five Years of Being a Black Poet (1971)[76]
- A Dialogue with James Baldwin (1973)[77]
- (With Margaret Walker) A Poetic Equation: Conversations between Nikki Giovanni and Margaret Walker (1974)[78]
- (Author of introduction) Adele Sebastian: Intro to Fine (poems), Woman in the Moon (1985)[79]
- Sacred Cows ... and Other Edibles (essays) (1988)[80]
- (Editor, with C. Dennison) Appalachian Elders: A Warm Hearth Sampler (1991)[81]
- (Author of foreword) The Abandoned Baobob: The Autobiography of a Woman (1991)
- Racism 101* (essays, 1994)
- (Editor) Grand Mothers: Poems, Reminiscences, and Short Stories about the Keepers of Our Traditions (1994)[82]
- (Editor) Shimmy Shimmy Shimmy Like My Sister Kate: Looking at the Harlem Renaissance through Poems (1995)[34]
- (Editor) 100 Best African American Poems (2010)[83]
- (Afterword) Continuum: New and Selected Poems by Mari Evans (2012)
- (Foreword) Heav'nly Tidings From the Afric Muse: The Grace and Genius of Phillis Wheatley by Richard Kigel (2017)(Foreword)
- (Featured Artist) Artemis 2017 (Academic Journal of southwest Virginia) (2017)[84]
- (Foreword) Black Ink: Literary Legends on the Peril, Power, and Pleasure of Reading and Writing (2018)
References
[edit]- ^ "Nikki Giovanni", Biography.com.
- ^ ab c d Jane M. Barstow, Yolanda Williams Page (eds), "Nikki Giovanni", Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007), p. 213.
- ^ "The Wintergreen Women Writers Collective".
- ^ ab Binnicker, Margaret D. (October 8, 2017), "Yolande Cornelia 'Nikki' Giovanni", Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture; updated March 7, 2018. Retrieved March 3, 2024.
- ^ "Awards and Honors". nikki-giovanni.com. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
- ^ "Deeper Than Double: Nikki Giovanni and her Appalachian Elders – Pluck!". Retrieved March 27, 2022.
- ^ ab c Poetry Foundation Center Nikki Giovanni Biography
- ^ "Nikki Giovanni-The Real Deal", Dallas News.
- ^ ab c d Giovanni, Nikki. "Chronology". Nikki Giovanni. Archived from the original on March 5, 2019. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
- ^ ab "Nikki Giovanni facts, information, pictures". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
- ^ "Ohio Reading Road Trip | Nikki Giovanni Biography". www.orrt.org. Retrieved March 27, 2022.
- ^ Harris, Elizabeth A. (December 16, 2020). "Nikki Giovanni, Finding the Song in the Darkest Days". The New York Times. Retrieved December 10, 2024.
- ^ "Nikki Giovanni, University Distinguished Professor". Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Archived from the original on December 16, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2013.
- ^ "End of a poetic era: Nikki Giovanni retires as English professor at Virginia Tech". Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Retrieved December 10, 2023.
- ^ "Virginia Tech's Nikki Giovanni Nominated for Spoken Word GRAMMY", Virginia Tech News, January 9, 2003.
- ^ "Virginia Women in History: Nikki Giovanni". Library of Virginia. Retrieved March 4, 2015.
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- ^ Odon, Rochelle A. (2008). ""[T]o fight the fight I'm fighting": The Voice of Nikki Giovanni and the Black Arts Movement". The Langston Hughes Review. 22: 36–42. ISSN 0737-0555. JSTOR 26434651. Retrieved June 23, 2020.
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- ^ Giovanni, Nikki (1976). Gemini : an extended autobiographical statement on my first twenty-five years of being a Black poet. Penguin Books. ISBN 0140042644.
- ^ A dialogue. M. Joseph. 1975. ISBN 0718113136.
- ^ A poetic equation : conversations between Nikki Giovanni and Margaret Walker (Rev. paperback ed.). Howard University Press. 1974. ISBN 0882580884.
- ^ The chant of the women of Magdalena and the Magdalena poems, with author's preface, Tradition and poetic memory. Woman in the Moon Publications. 1990. ISBN 0934172145.
- ^ Sacred cows-- and other edibles (1st ed.). W. Morrow. 1988. ISBN 0688089097.
- ^ Appalachian elders : a Warm Hearth sampler. Pocahontas Press. 1991. ISBN 9780936015323.
- ^ Giovanni, Nikki (September 15, 1996). Grand mothers : poems, reminiscences, and short stories about the keepers of our traditions (1st ed.). Holt. ISBN 0805049037.
- ^ Giovanni, Nikki (2010). The 100 best African American poems : (*but I cheated). Sourcebooks. ISBN 9781402221118.
- ^ ARTEMIS 2017. WILDER PUBLICATIONS. April 16, 2017. ISBN 9781515417071.
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Nikki Giovanni, Poet Who Wrote of Black Joy, Dies at 81
As a writer, she tackled race, gender, sex, politics and love. She was also a public intellectual who appeared on television and toured the country.
Nikki Giovanni, the charismatic and iconoclastic poet, activist, children’s book author and professor who wrote, irresistibly and sensuously, about race, politics, gender, sex and love, died on Monday in Blacksburg, Va. She was 81.
Her death, in a hospital, was caused by complications of lung cancer, said Virginia C. Fowler, her wife.
Ms. Giovanni was a prolific star of the Black Arts Movement, the wave of Black nationalism that erupted during the civil rights era and included the novelist John Oliver Killens, the playwright and poet LeRoi Jones, later known as Amiri Baraka, and the poets Audre Lorde, Ntozake Shange and Sonia Sanchez, among others. Like many women in the movement, Ms. Giovanni was confounded by the machismo that dominated it.
Yet Ms. Giovanni was also a star independent of the movement, a celebrity poet and public intellectual who appeared on television and toured the country. She was a riveting performer, diminutive at just 105 pounds — as reporters never failed to point out — her cadence inflected by the jazz and blues music she loved, with the timing of a comedian or a Baptist preacher who drew crowds wherever she appeared throughout her life. She said her best audiences were college students and prison inmates.
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In 1972, when she was 29, she sold out the 1,000-plus seats at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall, reading her poems alongside gospel music performed by the New York Community Choir. Soon after, for her 30th birthday, she sold out the Philharmonic theater, all 3,000 seats, where she was joined by Melba Moore and Wilson Pickett, who sang gospel numbers with the same choir that attended her earlier show. The audience joined in, too, with gusto, The New York Times reported, especially when she read one of her hits, the stirring paeon to Black female agency called “Ego-Tripping,” which generations of Black girls have performed at school. It begins:
I was born in the congo
I walked to the fertile crescent and built
the sphinx
I designed a pyramid so tough that a star
that only glows every one hundred years falls
into the center giving divine perfect light
I am bad
And it concludes, triumphantly:
I am so perfect so divine so ethereal so surreal/I cannot be comprehended/except by my permission/I mean … I … can fly/Like a bird in the sky …
By 1971, she had already published a memoir, “Gemini: An Extended Autobiographical Statement on My First Twenty-Five Years of Being a Black Poet.” Fiercely intelligent, Ms. Giovanni never lacked confidence, never suffered fools and was, in her youth, an Ayn Rand fan. In her book, she wrote about the contradictions and false pieties of the Black power movement, her scrappiness as a child and her ambivalence about gender relations. She was not convinced that men and women were meant to live together.
“Maybe they have a different thing going,” she wrote, “where they come together during mating season and produce beautiful, useless animals who then go on to love, you hope, each of you.”
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Her poem, “Housecleaning,” made the point succinctly:
i always liked housecleaning
even as a child
i dug straightening
the cabinets
putting new paper on
the shelves
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washing the refrigerator
inside out
and unfortunately this habit has
carried over and I find
i must remove you
from my life
In her early years, much of her poetry was boldly militant, as she addressed the horrors that galvanized the civil rights movement: the murder of Emmett Till, of the four Black girls in the Birmingham church bombing and of Martin Luther King Jr. “No one was much interested in a Black girl writing what was called ‘militant’ poetry,” she wrote in “Gemini,” so “I formed a company and published myself.”
To mollify the church ladies she had grown up with, particularly her beloved grandmother, who might be put off by her incendiary work, she recorded an album, “Truth is on its Way” (1971), with the New York Community Choir.
“I wanted something my grandmother could listen to,” she told Ebony magazine in 1972, “and I knew if gospel music was included, she would listen.”
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Along with “Ego Tripping,” the album included another enduring hit, “Nikki-Rosa,” which ended with:
and I really hope no white person ever has cause
to write about me
because they never understand
Black love is Black wealth and they’ll
probably talk about my hard childhood
and never understand that
all the while I was quite happy
Yolande Cornelia Giovanni Jr. was born on June 7, 1943, in Knoxville, Tenn., to Yolande (Watson) Giovanni and Jones Giovanni, known as Gus. Her older sister, Gary Ann, nicknamed her Nikki, and the name stuck. Soon after her birth, the family moved to Cincinnati, where Yolande and Gus began working as house parents in a school for Black boys, earning only one salary between them. Later, they would each teach grade school.
Nikki’s father was abusive toward her mother. It enraged her, as did her mother’s acceptance of it.
By 15, “I was either going to kill him, or leave,” she said later, so she moved to Knoxville to live with her grandparents. She graduated early from Austin High School (now Austin-East Magnet High School), where her grandfather taught Latin, to attend Fisk University, the historically Black college in Nashville, where, after a hiatus of a few years, she earned a bachelor’s degree in history, with honors, in 1967.
She had been thrown out for leaving campus without permission, and for protesting other campus rules. Becoming a debutante was not among her aspirations (she later wrote a poem about it) which made her an odd fit among Fisk’s sorority sisters.
But when she returned after a few years, the climate had changed; she studied with Mr. Killens, a founder of the Harlem Writers Guild; helped restart a chapter of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee; and began to write.
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She attended the University of Pennsylvania’s School of Social Work on a Ford Fellowship, but dropped out. She was not cut out for social work. The dean arranged for Ms. Giovanni to receive a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship to attend Columbia University’s School of Fine Arts, but she soon left to write full time.
She self-published her first two books, “Black Feeling Black Talk” and “Black Judgment” (1968). Her son, Thomas, was born in 1969: “I had a baby at 25 because I wanted to have a baby and I could afford to have a baby,” she told Ebony magazine with vehemence. “I didn’t get married because I didn’t want to get married and I could afford to not get married.”
But she did need to hustle. She hit the lecture circuit, and began appearing regularly on “Soul!,” the influential Black culture program that aired on public television from 1967 to 1972.
For one segment, she conducted a captivating two-hour interview with her hero, James Baldwin, which was filmed in London and ran as a two-part special in 1971. She was 28 and Mr. Baldwin, 47. It was astonishing, as The New Yorker put it: “Two of the most important artist-intellectuals of the twentieth century were engaged in intimate communion on national television.”
Wreathed in plumes of cigarette smoke (it was the 70s), she asked Mr. Baldwin about her father, who was, in her estimation, emblematic of so many Black men: What to do about a man who is mistreated in the world and comes home and brutalizes his wife? Where did that leave his daughter?
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“I’m afraid of Black men,” she said, adding, “It’s a cycle and it’s unfortunate because I need love.”
Later in their conversation, she said, “There has to be a way to do what we do and survive, which is what seems to me to be missing.”
“Sweetheart,” Mr. Baldwin answered. “Sweetheart. Our ancestors taught us how to do that.”
Ms. Giovanni held teaching positions at Rutgers and Queens College before being recruited in 1987 by Ms. Fowler, who was then the associate head of the English department at Virginia Tech, to be a visiting professor. She earned tenure a few years later. She and Ms. Fowler have been a couple ever since, and along the way Ms. Fowler became a scholar of her work, editing her collections and writing her biography, “Nikki Giovanni” (2013). They married in 2016, and retired in 2022.
Ms. Giovanni called Ms. Fowler her bench, as she explained to Elizabeth Harris of The New York Times in 2020.
“Everybody needs a bench, and in order to get a bench, you have to be one,” Ms. Giovanni said. “I could say love, but you get tired of hearing about love.”
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That said, she wrote many enticing love poems, including one that read:
I wrote a good omelet … and ate a hot poem …
after loving you
Hilton Als, the cultural critic and New Yorker writer, said in a phone interview that when he first heard Ms. Giovanni perform in the early ’70s, he was struck by her presence and the story she was telling, about a strong Black woman and the home that sustained her, epitomized in her poem, “My House.”
i mean it’s my house
and i want to fry pork chops
and bake sweet potatoes
and call them yams
cause i run the kitchen
and i can stand the heat
“It was a voice you didn’t hear a lot then, this desire for home,” he said. “Later, as she ditched the Black nationalist rhetoric, she became more herself. She was saying something really profound to me, a member of the gay community and the Black world and whatever. She was the first warrior in terms of talking about queer love, not specifically, but it was there.”
Among many honors, she received seven N.A.A.C.P. awards and 31 honorary doctorates. And a scientist who was a fan, Robert James Baker, named a species of bat after her, the Micronycteris giovanniae. She was the author of more than 30 books — many for children — three of which were best sellers. Her newest book, “The New Book: Poems, Letters, Blurbs, and Things,” is expected to be published next year.
In addition to Ms. Fowler, Ms. Giovanni is survived by her son, Thomas, and a granddaughter.
“I really like what the young people are doing,” Ms. Giovanni told The Times in 2020, reflecting on the Black Lives Matter movement, and the work of her students, “and I think my job is to be sure to get out of their way, but also let them know, if it means anything to them, that I’m proud of them.”
“I recommend old age,” she added. “There’s just nothing as wonderful as knowing you have done your job.”