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Looking for Lorraine

Page 28

by Imani Perry


  Tubbs, Vincent, 71–72

  United States Progressive Party, 33–34

  United States of America: Carl Hansberry’s disillusionment with, 22, 170; hypocrisy about freedom in, 158; LH’s commitment to, 183; role in Lumumba’s assassination, 153. See also activism, radical; patriotism, uncritical; politics

  University of Illinois, Navy Pier campus, 113–14

  University of Wisconsin: diaries, journals written at, 31; Frank Lloyd Wright’s lecture at, 31–32; Langdon Manor housing, 27–28; LH’s decision to attend, 26; racial, political tensions at, 28, 32–33; theater studies at, 29–31; World War II veterans at, 32

  US presidential election, 1948, 33–34

  US State Department: Airlift Africa, 1960, 152–53; criminalization of the Inter-American Peace Conference, 59; revoking passports of Du Bois, Robeson and LH, 56–57, 59

  US Supreme Court, Hansberry v. Lee, 17

  Veblen, Thorstein, 104

  Vietnam War, 172

  Village Voice: Cook’s photography for, 91; “Thoughts on Genet, Miller, and the New Paternalism” in, 110

  violence: against activists, civil rights workers, 163, 173; against Black women, 13–14; and colonialism, 143, 148; as commonplace in the ghetto, 13–15, 169–170; LH’s childhood experience of, 13–16, 98; police violence, 14–15, 24, 55; and racism, 50, 109, 126. See also the ghetto

  Vivaldo (character in Another Country), interracial bisexuality, 128

  Vogue magazine, article about LH, 102–3

  Waiting for Godot (Beckett), The Arrival of Mr. Todog as answer to, 180

  Walker, Alice, 199

  Walker, Margaret, 18

  Wallace, Henry, 33–34

  Wally (character in Sign), on need for action as well as dreams, 175

  Walter Lee Younger (character in Raisin): ambitions, yearnings, 97, 104, 139; comparison of with Willie Loman, 105–6; essential dignity of, 105; LH frustration with critics’ misunderstanding of, 106; swindling of, 138

  Ward, Douglas Turner, 53, 61, 162

  Ward, Theodore, 139

  Washington, Mary Helen, 6

  Waverly Place, New York, LH residence at, 94, 199

  Wechsler, James, 171, 173

  Western intellectualism, postwar, reflections of in Sign, 145

  West Side, Chicago, 201

  “What Use Are Flowers?” (Hansberry), 132–33

  White, Charles, 18

  White, Walter, 48

  “The White Negro” (Mailer), 109–10

  white supremacy: Baldwin’s excoriation of, 125–26; and Black perceptions of whites, 110–11; LH’s writings on, 56, 142–43; and limitations of Southern white writers, 123; whites’ need to accept responsibility for, 142

  Whitman, Steve, 4, 6

  Wiener, Ed, 82

  Wilkerson, Margaret, 7

  Williams, Robert, 168

  “Willie Loman, Walter Younger, and He Who Must Live” (Hansberry), 105–7

  Willy Loman (character in Death of a Salesman), comparison with Walter Lee Younger, 104

  Wilson, August, 3, 189, 200

  Winters, Shelley, 192–93

  Wolfe, Thomas, 70

  Wollstonecraft, Mary, 182

  women. See feminism; lesbians, lesbianism

  Woodlawn Property Owners Association, 16

  Workers World (newspaper), tribute to LH in, 188–89

  working class: fighting, resistance by, LH’s admiration for, 3, 9, 61; importance for effecting change, 165; LH’s portrayals of, 14, 113; mischaracterizations of LH as, 51, 104; work in New York on behalf of, 60–61

  “Working Class Poets of the Negro People,” 51

  Works Progress Administration (WPA): American Negro Exposition, 18; Federal Negro Theater, 53; Negro in Illinois project, 18

  World War II, political discussions following, 22, 32–33. See also communism

  Wright, Frank Lloyd, 31–32

  Wright, Richard: American Negro Exposition, 19; Baldwin’s and LH’s criticisms of, 123–24; fame and influence, 20; LH’s review of The Outsider, 47, 113; mentorship of Baldwin, 123; Negro in Illinois project, 18; social determinism of, 139

  Wright Junior College, controversy over Another Country at, 187

  writing craft: aesthetics of, appreciation for, 87; anger and rage in, 14; attention to detail, 1, 76–77, 82–83, 98, 113–14; experimentation, 13–14, 54–55, 57, 99; impact of fame on, 95–96; O’Casey’s influence, 30–31; and respect for skill and quality, 44–45, 120, 130; reworking themes in multiple forms, 13–14; self-criticism, 69–71, 95–96, 107, 129; and sense of vocation, mission, 1, 24, 46, 61–62, 76–77, 120, 182; skill at verbal portraiture, 91, 105, 148, 151; struggles with focus, 62, 71–72, 74; synthesis of politics and art, 77; work process, 75. See also Emily Jones (Hansberry pseudonym); specific works

  Yerma (Garcia Lorca), 9

  You Can’t Go Home Again (Wolfe), 70

  “Young, Gifted and Black” (Simone), 6, 197

  Young Communist League, 46–47

  Young Progressives of America, 33–34

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Imani Perry is the Hughes-Rogers Professor of African American Studies at Princeton University, where she is also affiliated with the Programs in Gender and Sexuality Studies and Law and Public Affairs. Perry is the author of five books and numerous scholarly articles. Her fields of inquiry include legal history, cultural studies, literary studies, and music. She holds a PhD from Harvard in American Studies, a JD from Harvard Law School, an LLM from Georgetown University Law Center, and a BA from Yale College. She is also a creative nonfiction essayist and a book reviewer. A native of Birmingham, Alabama, Perry spent most of her childhood in Massachusetts, as well as time in Chicago. Perry currently lives in the Philadelphia area with her two sons.

  BEACON PRESS

  Boston, Massachusetts

  www.beacon.org

  Beacon Press books

  are published under the auspices of

  the Unitarian Universalist Association of Congregations.

  © 2018 by Imani Perry

  All rights reserved

  Text design and composition by Michael Starkman at Wilsted & Taylor Publishing Services

  Gwendolyn Brooks, “kitchenette building” from Selected Poems, published by Harper & Row. Copyright © 1963 by Gwendolyn Brooks.

  Reprinted by consent of Brooks Permissions.

  Richard B. Moore, “For Lorraine Hansberry,” reprinted by permission.

  Frontispiece and photo on page 206: David Attie

  for Vogue, 1960; reprinted by consent of Eli Attie.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Perry, Imani, author.

  Title: Looking for Lorraine : the radiant and radical life of Lorraine Hansberry / Imani Perry.

  Description: Boston : Beacon Press, 2018. | Includes bibliographical references and index.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017055552 (print) | LCCN 2017058768 (ebook) | ISBN 9780807064504 (ebook) | ISBN 9780807064498 (hardcover : alk. paper)

  Subjects: LCSH: Hansberry, Lorraine, 1930-1965. | Dramatists, American—20th century—Biography. | African American dramatists—Biography. | African American women civil rights workers—Biography.

  Classification: LCC PS3515.A515 (ebook) | LCC PS3515.A515 Z84 2018 (print) |

  DDC 812/.54 [B] —dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017055552

 

 

 


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