Black Women Writers of Louisiana: Telling Their Stories
By Ann B. Dobie, Daren Tucker and Phebe A. Hayes
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About this ebook
Ann B. Dobie
Ann B. Dobie is Professor Emerita of English at the University of Louisiana-Lafayette, where she directed graduate studies in rhetoric and the university's writing-across-the-curriculum program. She has also directed a summer institute at the University of Vermont and worked with the Malta Writing Programme in Valetta, Malta. In 2002, she chaired the One Book, One City program "Lafayette Reads Ernest Gaines." She is the author (or coauthor) of fourteen books, compiler and editor of three literary anthologies and the author of numerous articles on literature and composition. For thirteen years, she served as founder and director of the National Writing Project of Acadiana. She is currently serving as editor for the Literature Section of KnowLA, an online encyclopedia of Louisiana history and culture sponsored by the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities.
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Black Women Writers of Louisiana - Ann B. Dobie
ALICE RUTH MOORE DUNBAR-NELSON
A WOMAN BEFORE HER TIME
Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson challenged, and broke, every stereotype placed on Black women, fighting constantly for her independence against the trammels of racism.
—Adrienne Rich
Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson was a woman with several names and even more professions. She was a poet, teacher, journalist, platform speaker, political activist, stenographer, executive secretary, editor, newspaper columnist and campaign manager, none of which was a likely career for a mixed-race woman born in 1875, even one living in multicultural New Orleans. The daughter of a seamstress who was a former slave born in Opelousas, Louisiana, and a father who was a white seaman of New Orleans, she recalled in adulthood being rejected by both races as too white to do the work of Blacks and too Black to be worthy of white work.
Despite such seeming drawbacks, in 1892, Dunbar completed a two-year teacher-training program at Straight University (which later merged into Dillard University) and began teaching in the public school system of New Orleans at Old Marigny Elementary. In this position, she assumed a prominent place in Creole society, especially in musical and literary circles. Teaching made her a living, but it is for her writing that she is remembered today. She wrote in many genres wherever she was and whatever else she was doing.
From her girlhood in New Orleans on, she participated in amateur theater. Later, she wrote and directed plays and pageants for school and community groups. In the African American community, she wrote skits and plays for class night programs, for Christmas and Easter celebrations and for club fundraising attractions. Whereas characters in her fiction are not identified as Black, those in her plays are, and through them she worked to broaden their stereotypical presentations. In adulthood, most of her plays were never presented, the best known one being Mine Eyes Have Seen. She even tried out silent films, without success.
In a few years, she left New Orleans for Boston and then moved on to New York. When her writing and a photograph in a literary magazine caught the attention of Paul Laurence Dunbar, he began a correspondence with her that went on for two years. In 1898, she moved to Washington, D.C., to be with him, and they married that year. As Paul Dunbar was America’s first celebrated Black poet, he was prominent in the Harlem Renaissance, drawing her into the intellectual, social and artistic movement known at the time as the New Negro Movement. She also taught in Brooklyn, as she would continue doing in different schools at the elementary, secondary and college levels until 1931.
The marriage was unsuccessful, even tempestuous, due partly to Paul’s tuberculosis, depression and alcoholism. (Doctors prescribed alcohol to treat his tuberculosis, and he became addicted.) He was also disturbed by her lesbian affairs and was frequently absent from the marriage due to his career. She left him after he beat her severely in 1902 and moved to Delaware. They were never divorced but remained separated. He died in 1906.
In Delaware, she taught at Howard High School in Wilmington for over a decade. She not only taught but also became head of the English Department, raised money, directed class night plays, wrote the history of the school and assisted the administration. Later, she would write an (unpublished) novel titled This Lofty Oak about the founder of Howard High School, who gave Dunbar emotional support and encouragement. She also taught summer sessions at State College for Colored Students (now Delaware State University) and at the Hampton Institute. She enrolled as a student at Cornell University in 1907 and then went back to Delaware. On her return, she married Henry Arthur Callis, a prominent physician and professor at Howard University, but kept it secret. It quickly ended in divorce, perhaps because he was twelve years younger than she but also because she continued to pursue physical and emotional relationships with other women. (In her diary, she alludes to such affairs and flirtations.)
In 1916, Alice Dunbar-Nelson was married a third time to Robert J. Nelson, whom she called Bobbo, a journalist, poet, civil rights activist and widower with two children. Their marriage has been described by Gloria Hull as a good professional union.
They stayed married, although she had intimate relations with several women during this time. She joined Nelson in his activism and was involved in many civic, racial and women’s causes.
Despite her hyperactive lifestyle, she had a variety of health problems: high blood pressure, apoplectic spells, kidney albumen, neuritis and sciatica, vertigo, fatigue, leucorrhea and insomnia. In 1930, she complained in her diary of mental distress: profoundly in the D’s—discouraged, depressed, disheartened, disgusted.
Throughout the diary, she complains of having the blues
and worries about growing old, being unestablished,
middle-aged and able to remain useful.
Her busy life ended in 1935 due to a heart ailment at the age of sixty. Her papers were collected by the University of Delaware. Throughout her life, she received more public notice for being Paul Dunbar’s wife than for her own achievement, but today, she is remembered for her writing and her fight for social justice for women and African Americans.
Alice Dunbar was obviously intelligent, but she had additional attributes that helped her make her way in the world. She was described by family and friends as being forceful and strong willed, imaginative and inquisitive. It did not hurt that she was also tall, light skinned enough to pass for white, had auburn curls and dressed in an elegant fashion. At times, she seemed to be highly emotional, needing a calming influence around her. In fact, her personality was full of contrasts, even contradictions. For example, she was said to be very ladylike, conscious of her reputation, her good manners and social conventions. She had the education, culture, looks and manner of the higher classes,
but according to Hull, she also liked to drink bootleg whiskey, go to Harlem clubs and cabarets, play the numbers and wear hot clothes.
Indeed, she thought of herself as belonging to the upper class although she was not financially secure, having sometimes to go to pawnshops to get money to pay her household bills. She had a lifelong interest in psychology and used unorthodox spiritual systems. She believed in bad-mouthing
(speaking curses on deserving people), read her future in cards, paid attention to her dreams and relied heavily on her unconscious mind.
Although Dunbar played many roles throughout her lifetime, it is for her writings that she is chiefly remembered today. Journalism, which took most of her time, fit her talents and needs. In her newspaper columns, she spoke from a Black woman’s point of view, allowing herself to be contrary, witty, iconoclastic and intellectual. It allowed her space to indulge the causes that occupied her for so many years, particularly race and feminism. At the same time, she also worked at short stories, poetry, film scenarios, plays, fiction and a diary and started at least four novels. In addition, she edited two anthologies. Unfortunately, journalism was not as highly regarded by readers and critics as fiction and poetry, but she regarded all her work as producing literature.
Dunbar’s first collection of stories and poems, Violets and Other Tales, was published in 1898 by The Monthly Review when she was barely twenty years old. It is an early example of her ability to work in multiple genres, as it is a collection of short stories, sketches, essays, reviews and poetry, some of the pieces probably written for newspapers or magazines. In subjects and style, they are similar to other works of their day except for their depiction of Creole culture. Several of the stories are set in New Orleans with the characters living in its neighborhoods, walking its streets and passing its landmarks. Typical is Anarchy Alley,
which describes a small part of the city as a sort of Bohemia in America:
Plenty of saloons—great, gorgeous, gaudy places, with pianos and swift-footed waiters, tables and cards, and men, men, men. The famous Three Brothers Saloon occupies a position about midway the alley, and at its doors, the acme, the culminating point, the superlative degree of unquietude and discontent is reached.…Behind its odors, swinging as easily between the street and the liquor-fumed halls as the soul swings between right and wrong, the disturbed minds of the working-men become clouded, heated, and wrothily ready for deeds of violence.
Four years after publication of Violets, she brought out what was to become one of her most admired works, The Goodness of St. Roque, and Other Stories, although it was barely noticed at the time. She published it as a companion piece to her husband’s (Paul Laurence Dunbar) Poems of Cabin and Field. In this volume, she continued to mine her Creole heritage, making her one of the first Louisiana women of color to publish books in English and to explore Creole society. The title story, for example, traces the route of the train that
puffed its way wheezily out wide Elysian Fields Street, around the lily-covered bayous, to Milneburg-on-the-Lake. Now a picnic at Milneburg is a thing to be remembered for ever. One charters a rickety-looking, weather-beaten dancing pavilion, built over the water, and after storing the children—for your true Creole never leaves the small folks at home—and the baskets and mothers downstairs, the young folks go upstairs and dance to the tune of the best band you ever heard. For what can equal