In the mind of Alice Walker, women are not gifts to be prized or beheld.
Reading her work, I’m acquainted with a person who knew the objectification underlying the paltry praise women often receive from men. Especially when this praise — compliments about beauty, daintiness, or what have you — comes in lieu of true respect.
Over the weekend, I spent some time with Walker’s 1972 essay “In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens.” There are passages in this essay that read like direct rebuttals to conservatives who say nothing is lost — and that in fact, much is gained — through the erasure of Black history and the suppression of Black stories. Particularly, Black women’s stories.
To me, that’s the conceit of efforts to ban books such as Walker’s “The Color Purple,” which include accurate portrayals of the abuse Black women endure from men but also the love these women develop for themselves and one another under the threat of this abuse.
That’s why she’s the focus on Day 4 of our “Black History, Uncensored” series.
Here, in “Gardens,” she writes about the indignity Black women face in not being allowed to live for self.








