Alix Kates Shulman

Alix Kates Shulman
Born Alix Kates Shulman
Occupation Writer
Nationality American
Alma mater Case Western Reserve University, Columbia University, New York University
Period 21st Century

www.alixkshulman.com

Alix Kates Shulman (born August 17, 1932) is an American writer of fiction, memoirs, and essays, as well as one of the early radical feminist activists of feminism's Second Wave. She is best known for her bestselling debut, Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen (Knopf, 1972), "one of the first novels to emerge from the Women's Liberation Movement" (Oxford Companion to Women's Writing).

Contents

Early life and education

Shulman was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and attended Case Western Reserve University, where she discovered her interest in philosophy.[1] She then moved to New York City in 1953 to study philosophy at the Columbia University Graduate School.

Writing

Shulman first emerged as the author of the controversial "A Marriage Agreement," which proposes that men and women split childcare and housework equally and details a method for doing so. Originally published in the feminist journal Up From Under in 1969, it was widely reproduced in magazines (Life, Redbook, Ms., New York) and anthologies, including a Harvard textbook on contract law. It continues to be debated, for instance in January 2007 in a Washington Post Blog.[2]

Three years later, Shulman published first novel, Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen (Knopf, 1972), which examineed the contradictions and pressures on a young woman of the 1940s, '50s, and '60s through the story of Sasha Davis from childhood through marriage and motherhood. Almost continually in print, it was reissued in a 25th anniversary edition in 1997 by Penguin and in a 35th anniversary "Feminist Classics" edition in 2007 by Farrar, Straus & Giroux.

Her second novel, Burning Questions (Knopf, 1978), recreates the rise of WLM and sets it in a historical context. Her third novel, On the Stroll [Knopf, 1981], takes on the themes of homelessness and abuse through the story of a shopping-bag lady and a teenage runaway who is preyed upon by a pimp over the course of one summer. Her fourth novel, In Every Woman's Life... [Knopf, 1987]), explores marriage, children, and singleness in a contemporary comedy of manners. After that, in her next three books, she turned to memoirs: Drinking the Rain [FSG, 1995], about her experience of living alone on an island without electricity, road, or phone, as she undergoes a midlife change; A Good Enough Daughter [Schocken, 1997], about her life as a daughter to loving parents whom she sees through their deaths; and To Love What Is [FSG, 2008], an account of caring for her husband following a 2004 accident that left him seriously brain-impaired. In addition, she has written two books on anarchist-feminist Emma Goldman (To The Barricades [T.Y.Crowell, 1971], Red Emma Speaks: An Emma Goldman Reader [Random House 1972]), and three children's books (Bosley on the Number Line [McKay, 1970], Finders Keepers [Bradbury Press, 1971], Awake or Asleep [Addison Wesley, 1971]).

Shulman has taught writing and women's literature widely in the U.S., including at the University of Hawaii at Manoa (Honolulu), where she held the Citizens Chair in 1991-2; also at the University of Maine, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and Yale. She received an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Case Western Reserve University in 2001.

Political Activism

In the early 1960s Shulman was active in the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE). She named the theater arts chapter "7-Arts CORE" prior to the group's attending the 1963 March on Washington.

She became opposed to the Vietnam War, counseling draftees on their rights at the Quaker Meeting House and the Washington Square Methodist Episcopal Church, both in Manhattan.

In 1967 Shulman first became involved in the Women's Liberation Movement (WLM) in New York City by participating in the monthly discussion group, New York Radical Women; she subsequently joined several small consciousness raising women's groups (Redstockings, WITCH, New York Radical Feminists), and feminist political action groups (CARASA, No More Nice Girls, Feminist Futures, Take Back the Future). She was one of the planners of the first national demonstration of WLM, which catapulted WLM to national attention, the August 1968 Miss America protest in Atlantic City, a demonstration against oppressive beauty standards, which was a major theme of Memoirs of an Ex-Prom Queen.

Shulman's activisim included participation, beginning in 1969 and continuing to the present day, in a number of public speak-outs and conferences on such feminist issues as beauty standards, rape, violence against women, reproductive choice, marriage, and motherhood [3] .[4] The goal of the speak-out was to initiate a public dialogue on experiences that at the time were widely considered taboo subjects of speech. In the film Speak Out: I Had an Abortion, Shulman and other subjects testify to having had multiple abortions. Shulman said that "not one was the result of carelessness" but rather were due to the failure of the birth control devices she used.[5]

In 1992, as a Visiting Professor at the University of Hawaii, she was a founder of a Pacific chapter of the group No More Nice Girls. The Pacific chapter organized demonstrations, held a speak-out, and put on street theater in Honolulu.[6] In the 1990s she was active on the board of THEA (The House of Elder Artists), an organization attempting to establish a new kind of retirement community in Manhattan for politically and artistically active seniors.[7]

Personal life

Shulman was married for a short time to a graduate student in the English department at Columbia. In 1959 she married her second husband, Martin Shulman, with whom she had two children. Shulman has spoken about having had four abortions, saying that "not one was the result of carelessness."[8] In 1989 she married Scott York. Following his 2004 traumatic brain injury, through her writing she became an advocate of the elderly and disabled.[9]

Her son, Theodore Shulman, is a pro-choice activist; he was arrested by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in February 2011, reportedly on charges of making interstate threats to anti-abortion advocates.[10] Her daughter, Polly Shulman, is an author.[11]

Bibliography

See also

References

Notes

External links