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Claudia Rankine [1963-0] American
Rank: 102
Poet


Claudia Rankine is a poet, essayist, playwright and the editor of several anthologies. She is the author of five volumes of poetry, two plays and various essays.
Rankine was inspire to become a writer at a young age. During her youth, her mother would read Emily Dickinson to her. 

Future, Imagination, Society



QuoteTagsRank
How do you keep the black female body present, and how do you own value for something that society won't give value to? It's a question I try to answer through my own life. Society
101
The Black Lives Matter movement can be read as an attempt to keep mourning an open dynamic in our culture because black lives exist in a state of precariousness. Mourning then bears both the vulnerability inherent in black lives and the instability regarding a future for those lives. Future
102
When you are alone and too tired even to turn on any of your devices, you let yourself linger in a past stacked among your pillows.
103
A hoodie is worn by everybody: kids, white men, white women, black men. But it clings to the black body as a sign of criminality like nothing else.
104
You don't become a poet if you want to make any money.
105
If the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s civil rights movement made demands that altered the course of American lives and backed up those demands with the willingness to give up your life in service of your civil rights, with Black Lives Matter, a more internalized change is being asked for: recognition.
106
As African-Americans, that's what's being played fast and loose with, our citizenship. When you have the Trayvon Martins and the Michael Browns being shot and killed, it's because, on a certain level, there is a kind of mutability in the understanding of citizenship around the black body.
107
There are two worlds out there - two Americas out there. If you're a white person, there's one way of being a citizen in our country, and if you're a brown or a black body, there's another way of being a citizen, and that way is very close to death. It's very close to the loss of your life.
108
The American imagination has never been able to fully recover from its white-supremacist beginnings. Imagination
109
Unlike earlier black-power movements that tried to fight or segregate for self-preservation, Black Lives Matter aligns with the dead, continues the mourning, and refuses the forgetting in front of all of us.
110
A lot of people feel that the realm of poetry and the realm of the lyric is personal feeling and should rise above politics, which, in fact, good poetry has never done.
111
The book, 'Citizen,' begins with daily encounters, little moments, places where language reveals how racism determines how we interact.
112
I love language because when it succeeds, for me, it doesn't just tell me something. It enacts something. It creates something. And it goes both ways. Sometimes it's violent. Sometimes it hurts you. And sometimes it saves you.
113
When you're writing, you think: How does intimacy happen in the work? You don't know who your reader is, woman, man, child, black person, Asian, who knows?
114
I think sports is one of the places where race plays itself out publicly. Although we pretend it doesn't.
115
I don't write every day. I write when I want to write.
116

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