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The Sisterhood

How a Network of Black Women Writers Changed American Culture

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Pub Date Nov 07 2023 | Archive Date Feb 07 2024


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Description

Finalist, 2025 Frances Fuller Victor Award in General Nonfiction, Oregon Book Awards

Honorable Mention, 2024 William Sanders Scarborough Prize, Modern Language Association

One Sunday afternoon in February 1977, Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, Ntozake Shange, and several other Black women writers met at June Jordan’s Brooklyn apartment to eat gumbo, drink champagne, and talk about their work. Calling themselves “The Sisterhood,” the group—which also came to include Audre Lorde, Paule Marshall, Margo Jefferson, and others—would get together once a month over the next two years, creating a vital space for Black women to discuss literature and liberation.

The Sisterhood tells the story of how this remarkable community transformed American writing and cultural institutions. Drawing on original interviews with Sisterhood members as well as correspondence, meeting minutes, and readings of their works, Courtney Thorsson explores the group’s everyday collaboration and profound legacy. The Sisterhood advocated for Black women writers at trade publishers and magazines such as Random House, Ms., and Essence, and eventually in academic departments as well—often in the face of sexist, racist, and homophobic backlash. Thorsson traces the personal, professional, and political ties that brought the group together as well as the reasons for its dissolution. She considers the popular and critical success of Sisterhood members in the 1980s, the uneasy absorption of Black feminism into the academy, and how younger writers built on the foundations the group laid. Highlighting the organizing, networking, and community building that nurtured Black women’s writing, this book demonstrates that The Sisterhood offers an enduring model for Black feminist collaboration.
Finalist, 2025 Frances Fuller Victor Award in General Nonfiction, Oregon Book Awards

Honorable Mention, 2024 William Sanders Scarborough Prize, Modern Language Association

One Sunday afternoon in...

Advance Praise

"Starting with a photograph, Courtney Thorsson brings her all to this luminous work about The Sisterhood, a group of Black women writers who met informally in the 1970s. Together they transformed American literature and helped to shape generations of writers, visual artists, filmmakers, and scholars. This is a profoundly important story and it has found an astute and sensitive author in Thorsson."

—Farah Jasmine Griffin, author of In Search of a Beautiful Freedom: New and Selected Essays

"Proceeding from an archive of one iconic photograph of The Sisterhood, 1977, Courtney Thorsson has pieced together the story of how Black women writers, in intimate and collaborative gatherings throughout New York in the 1970s, created literary history. It is an indispensable, fascinating and original history and one that might have been lost without Thorsson’s loving and meticulous archival work."

—Mary Helen Washington, author of The Other Blacklist: The African American Literary and Cultural Left of the 1950s

"Starting with a photograph, Courtney Thorsson brings her all to this luminous work about The Sisterhood, a group of Black women writers who met informally in the 1970s. Together they transformed...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9780231204729
PRICE $28.95 (USD)

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