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Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz is a lesbian essayist, poet, activist and academic, born in 1945 in Brooklyn, New York.[1]
Her grandparents emigrated to the United States from Eastern Europe, Poland and Russia.[2]
Kaye/Kantrowitz was active in the Harlem Civil Rights Movement as a teenager.
When she was 17, she worked with the Harlem Education Project, a project of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee. About this she says “It was my first experience with a mobilizing proud community and with the possibilities of collective action.”[3]
She associates her activism with her Jewish upbringing, stating that it was related to her family's Jewish cultural and political heritage “as much as the candles we lit for Hanukkah, or the Seders where bread and matzoh shared the table.’ She states in her essay, To Be a Radical Jew in the Late 20th Century that her “parents had not pushed (her) into activism, yet clearly they raised (her) to do these things.”[2]
In 1966 Kaye/Kantrowitz left New York for Graduate School in Berkeley, California. From there, she moved to Portland, Oregon, remaining there until 1979. She then spent a couple years in New Mexico.[4]
Kaye/Kantrowitz has described herself as a “Conscious Jew”.[1]
Along with Nancy Bereano, Evelyn T. Beck, Bernice Mennis, Irena Klepfisz and Adrienne Rich, Kaye/Kantrowitz was a member of Di Vilde Chayes (English: The Wild Beasts), A Jewish feminist group that examined and responded to political issues in the Middle East, as well as to antisemitism.[5][6]
In 1990, she acted as a founding director for Jews for Racial and Economic Justice a progressive Jewish organization focused mostly on anti-racist work and issues of economic justice.[7][8]
Around that time, she also co-founded Beyond the Pale: The Progressive Jewish Radio Hour, a radio program aired weekly on WBAI (99.5 FM) which “mixes local, national, and international political debate and analysis, from a progressive Jewish perspective with the voices and sounds of contemporary Jewish culture”.[1]
Kaye/Kantrowitz has also served on the steering committee of the group New Jewish Agenda.[9]
Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz taught the first Womens studies course at the University of California at Berkeley. She has also taught at Hamilton College, Brooklyn College/CUNY, and Vermont College,[1] and currently teaches at Queens College in Jewish Studies, History and Comparative Literature.
Published works include:
Kaye/Kantrowitz has also contributed to anthologies like:
She also edited the Lesbian periodical Sinister Wisdom from 1983 to 1987.[10]