Shirley Graham Du Bois
Shirley Graham Du Bois (November 11, 1896 – March 27, 1977) was an American award-winning author, playwright, composer, and activist for African-American and other causes. In later life she married the noted thinker, writer, and activist W. E. B. Du Bois. The couple became citizens of Ghana in 1961 after they emigrated to that country. She won the Messner and the Anisfield-Wolf prizes for her works.
Biography
She was born Lola Shirley Graham, Jr. in Indianapolis, Indiana, in 1896, as the only daughter among six children. Her father was an African Methodist Episcopal minister, and the family moved often. In June 1915, Shirley graduated from Lewis and Clark High School in Spokane, Washington.[1]
She married her first husband, Shadrach T. McCants, in 1921. Their son Robert was born in 1923, followed by David in 1925. They divorced in 1927. In 1926, Graham moved to Paris, France, to study music composition at the Sorbonne. She thought that this education might allow her to achieve better employment and be able to better support her children. Meeting Africans and Afro-Caribbean people in Paris introduced her to new music and cultures.
In 1931, Graham entered Oberlin College as an advanced student and, after earning her B.A. in 1934, went on to do graduate work in music, completing a master's degree in 1935.[2] In 1936, Hallie Flanagan appointed Graham director of the Chicago Negro Unit of the Federal Theatre Project, part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Works Progress Administration. She wrote musical scores, directed, and did additional associated work.[2]
In the late 1940s, Graham became a member of Sojourners for Truth and Justice – an African-American organization working for global women's liberation.[1] Around the same time, she joined the American Communist Party.[1]
She and Du Bois married in 1951, the second marriage for both. She was 54 years old; he was 83. They later emigrated to Ghana, where they received citizenship in 1961 and he died in 1963. In 1967, she was forced to leave after a military-led coup d'état, and moved to Cairo, Egypt, where she continued writing. Her surviving son David Graham Du Bois accompanied her and worked as a journalist. [citation needed]
Shirley Graham Du Bois died of breast cancer on March 27, 1977, aged 80, in Beijing, China, where she had gone for treatment. [citation needed]
Works
After meeting Africans in Paris while studying at the Sorbonne in 1926, Graham composed the musical score and libretto of Tom Tom: An Epic of Music and the Negro (1932), an opera. She used music, dance and the book to express the story of Africans' journey to the North American colonies, through slavery and to freedom.[3] It premiered in Cleveland, Ohio.[4] The opera attracted 10,000 people to its premier at the Cleveland Stadium and 15,000 to the second performance.[2][5]
According to the Oxford Companion to African-American Literature, her theatre works included Deep Rivers (1939), a musical; It's Morning (1940), a one-act tragedy about a slave mother who contemplates infanticide; I Gotta Home (1940), a one-act drama; Track Thirteen (1940), a comedy for radio and her only published play; Elijah's Raven (1941), a three-act comedy; and Dust to Earth (1941), a three-act tragedy.[2]
Due to the difficulty in getting musicals or plays produced and published, Graham turned to literature. She wrote in a variety of genres, specializing from the 1950s in biographies of leading African-American and world figures for young readers. She wanted to increase the number of books that dealt with notable African Americans in elementary school libraries. Owing to her personal knowledge of her subjects, her books on Paul Robeson and Kwame Nkrumah are considered especially interesting. Other subjects included Frederick Douglass, Phillis Wheatley, and Booker T. Washington; as well as Gamal Abdul Nasser, and Julius Nyerere. One of her last novels, Zulu Heart (1974), included sympathetic portrayals of whites in South Africa despite racial conflicts.[2]
Selections from her correspondence with her husband (both before and after their relationship began) appear in the three volume 1976 collection edited by Herbert Aptheker (ed.), Correspondence of W.E.B. Du Bois.[6] Shirley Graham Du Bois is the subject of Race Woman: The Lives of Shirley Graham Du Bois.[5]
Quotes
"We are a race of artists. What are we doing about it?"
– "Towards an American Theatre," Arts Quarterly, October–December 1937.[7]
Works
Biographies for young readers:[2]
- with George D. Lipscomb, Dr. George Washington Carver, Scientist, New York: Julian Messner, 1944, (Library binding has ISBN 978-0671325107)
- Paul Robeson, Citizen of the World, 1946; winner of Anisfield-Wolf Prize;[2] Connecticut: Greenwood Press, reprint 1972
- Your Most Humble Servant: Benjamin Banneker, New York: Julian Messner, 1949
- The Story of Phillis Wheatley: Poetess of the Revolution, New York: Julian Messner, 1949
- The Story of Pocahontas, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, 1953
- Jean Baptiste Pointe duSable: Founder of Chicago (1953)
- Booker T. Washington: Educator of Head, Hand and Heart, New York: Julian Messner, 1955
- His Day Is Marching On: A Memoir of W.E.B. Du Bois, New York: Lippincott, 1971
- Julius K. Nyerere, Teacher of Africa, New York: Julian Messner, 1975
- Du Bois: A Pictorial Biography, Johnsons, 1978
Novels:
- There Once Was a Slave (1947), the Messner Prize-winning historical novel on the life of Frederick Douglass;[2] and
- Zulu Heart, New York: Third Press, 1974
References
- ^ a b c Aptheker, Bettina. "Graham Du Bois, Shirley," in Susan Ware and Stacy Braukman (eds), Notable American Women: A Biographical Dictionary, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2004, pp. 248–249.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Shirley Graham", Oxford Companion to African-American Literature, 2001, accessed January 18, 2012.
- ^ Linda Ragin, "Review: Gerald Horne, 'Race Woman'", Books for Blacks Website, 2000, accessed January 18, 2012.
- ^ Schmalenberger, Sarah, "Debuting Her Political Voice: The Lost Opera of Shirley Graham", Black Music Research Journal, Vol. 26, No. 1 (Spring 2006), pp. 39–87.
- ^ a b Gerald Horne, Race Woman: The Lives of Shirley Graham Du Bois (2000), New York: New York University Press, 2000; ISBN 978-0814736487, ISBN 0814736483
- ^ Correspondence of W.E.B. Du Bois, Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press; ISBN 1558491031/ISBN 978-1558491038.
- ^ "Shirley Graham (Du Bois)", in Women of Color, Women of Words, 2005; retrieved March 14, 2009.
Further reading/links
- Nishikawa, Kinohi. "Shirley Graham" entry, The Greenwood Encyclopedia of African American Literature. Ed. Hans Ostrom and J. David Macey, Jr. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press, 2005, pp. 652–53.
- Thompson, Robert Dee. A socio-biography of Shirley Graham-Du Bois: a life in the struggle. University of California, Santa Cruz, 1997 (digitized August 4, 2009)
- Shirley Graham Du Bois profile, African American Registry
- Shirley Graham Du Bois Papers, Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University
- Shirley Graham Du Bois bibliography, amazon.com; accessed May 2, 2014.
- FBI files on Shirley Graham Du Bois
Sources
- Hine, Darlene Clark (ed). Black Women in America: An Historical Encyclopedia, New York: Carlson, NY, 1993
- 1896 births
- 1977 deaths
- Activists for African-American civil rights
- African-American activists
- African-American musicians
- African-American women writers
- African-American composers
- African-American female composers
- African-American feminists
- American feminist writers
- American communists
- American Marxists
- American women activists
- American expatriates in Ghana
- Ghanaian activists
- Ghanaian women writers
- Deaths from cancer in the People's Republic of China
- Deaths from breast cancer
- Guggenheim Fellows
- Marxist feminists
- Marxist writers
- Writers from Evansville, Indiana
- Radical feminists
- American female composers
- Communist women writers
- Musicians from Evansville, Indiana
- 20th-century composers
- 20th-century American musicians