Published in 2002
320 pages
June Millicent Jordan (July 9, 1936 – June 14, 2002) was a Caribbean-American poet and activist. Jordan received numerous honors and awards, including a 1969-70 Rockefeller grant for creative writing, a Yaddo Fellowship in 1979, a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship in 1982, and the Achievement Award for International Reporting from the National Association of Black Journalists in 1984. Jordan also won the Lila Wallace Reader’s Digest Writers Award from 1995 to 1998 as well as the Ground Breakers-Dream Makers Award from The Woman’s Foundation in 1994.
What is this book about?
“She remains a thinker and activist who ‘insists upon complexity.’ ” –Reamy Jansen, San Francisco Chronicle
Some of Us Did Not Die brings together a rich sampling of the late poet June Jordan’s prose writings. The essays in this collection, which include her last writings and span the length of her extraordinary career, reveal Jordan as an incisive analyst of the personal and public costs of remaining committed to the ideal and practice of democracy. Willing to venture into the most painful contradictions of American culture and politics, Jordan comes back with lyrical honesty, wit, and wide-ranging intelligence in these accounts of her reckoning with life as a teacher, poet, activist, and citizen.