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Need some good information fast on African American history? We've got what you're looking for with our selection of more than 300 reference articles.

Article provided by: Encyclopaedia Britannica



Gwendolyn Brooks Encyclopedia Britannica
(Born June 7, 1917, Topeka, Kansas, U.S.—Died December 3, 2000, Chicago, Illinois)

American poet whose works deal with the everyday life of urban blacks. She was the first African American poet to win the Pulitzer Prize (1949), and in 1968 she was named the poet laureate of Illinois.

Brooks graduated from Wilson Junior College in Chicago in 1936. Her early verses appeared in the Chicago Defender, a newspaper written primarily for that city's African American community. Her first published collection, A Street in Bronzeville (1945), reveals her talent for making the ordinary life of her neighbours extraordinary. Annie Allen (1949), for which she won the Pulitzer Prize, is a loosely connected series of poems related to an African American girl's growing up in Chicago. The same theme was used for Brooks's novel Maud Martha (1953).

In 1985–86 Brooks was Library of Congress consultant in poetry (now poet laureate consultant in poetry), and in 1989 she received a lifetime achievement award from the National Endowment for the Arts. She became a professor of English at Chicago State University in 1990, a position she held until her death.

Copyright © 2002 Encyclopedia Britannica, Inc.


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