Toni Cade Bambara was an African-American author, documentary film-maker, social activist and college professor.
Background
Miltona Mirkin Cade was born on March 25, 1939 in Harlem, New York, to parents Walter and Helen (Henderson) Cade. She grew up in Harlem, Bedford Stuyvesant (Brooklyn), Queens and New Jersey. At age 6, she changed her name from Miltona to Toni, and then in 1970 changed her name to include the name of a West African ethnic group, Bambara, after finding the name written on a sketchbook found in a trunk among her great-grandmother's other belongings.
Education
Bambara graduated from Queens College with a B. A. in Theater Arts/English Literature in 1959, then studied mime at the Ecole de Mime Etienne Decroux in Paris, France. She also became interested in dance before completing her master's degree at City College, New York in 1964, while serving as program director of Colony Settlement House in Brooklyn.
Career
After attending Queens College in New York City and several European institutions, Bambara worked as a free-lance writer and lecturer, social investigator for the New York State Department of Welfare, and director of recreation in the psychiatry department at Metropolitan Hospital in New York City.
Bambara's interest in black liberation and women's movements led her to edit and publish an anthology entitled The Black Woman in 1970. The work is a collection of poetry, short stories, and essays by such celebrated writers as Nikki Giovanni, Audre Lorde, Alice Walker, and Paule Marshall. The Black Woman also contains short stories by Bambara, who was at that time still writing under the name of Cade.
Another anthology, Tales and Stories for Black Folks, followed in 1971. Bambara explained in the introduction to this short story collection that the work's aim is to instruct young blacks about "Our Great Kitchen Tradition, " Bambara's term for the black tradition of storytelling. In the first part of Tales and Stories, Bambara included works by writers like Langston Hughes, Alice Walker, and Ernest Gaines-stories she wished she had read while growing up.
The second part of the collection contains stories by students in a first year composition class Bambara was teaching at Livingston College, Rutgers University.
Additionally, such a mixture "would have helped her inspire young adults to read, to think critically, and to write. " Most of Bambara's early writings-short stories written between 1959 and 1970 under the name Toni Cade-were collected in her next work, Gorilla, My Love (1972). Nevertheless, Gorilla, My Love remains her most widely read collection.
Bambara traveled to Cuba in 1973 and Vietnam in 1975, meeting with both the Federation of Cuban Women and the Women's Union in Vietnam.
She was impressed with both groups, particularly with the ability of the Cuban women to surpass class and color conflicts and with the Vietnamese women's resistance to their traditional place in society.
Furthermore, upon returning to the United States, Bambara moved to the South, where she became a founding member of the Southern Collective of African-American Writers.
Her travels and her involvement with community groups like the collective influenced the themes and settings of The Sea Birds Are Still Alive (1977), her second collection of short stories. These stories take place in diverse geographical areas, and they center chiefly around communities instead of individuals.
With both collections, critics noted Bambara's skill in the genre, and many praised the musical nature of language and dialogue in her stories, which she herself likens to "riffs" and "be-bop. " Although Bambara admittedly favored the short story genre, her next work, The Salt Eaters (1980), is a novel.
The novel, which focuses on the recovery of community organizer Velma Henry from an attempted suicide, consists of a "fugue-like interweaving of voices, " Bambara's speciality. The Salt Eaters succeeded in gaining more critical attention for Bambara, but many reviewers found the work to be confusing, particularly because of breaks in the story line and the use of various alternating narrators. Others appreciated her "complex vision, " however, and further praised her ability to write dialogue.
Since the publication of The Salt Eaters in 1980, Bambara devoted herself to another medium, film.
On December 9, 1995, Bambara died of colon cancer in Philadelphia.
Politics
Bambara participated in several community and activist organizations, and her work was influenced by the Civil Rights and Black Nationalist movements of the 1960s.
Views
Female protagonists and narrators dominate her writing, which was informed by radical feminism and firmly placed inside African-American culture, with its dialect, oral traditions and jazz techniques. Like other members of the Black Arts Movement, Bambara was heavily influenced by “Garveyites, Muslims, Pan-Africanists, and Communists”.
Her works were explicitly political, concerned with injustice and oppression in general and with the fate of African-American communities and grassroots political organizations in particular, especially The Salt Eaters.
Quotations:
Bambara was generally silent about her childhood, but she revealed a few details from her youth. In an interview with Beverly Guy-Sheftall in Sturdy Black Bridges: Visions of Black Women in Literature, Bambara discussed some women who influenced her work: "For example, in every neighborhood I lived in there were always two types of women that somehow pulled me and sort of got their wagons in a circle around me. I call them Miss Naomi and Miss Gladys, although I'm sure they came under various names. The Miss Naomi types . .. would give me advice like, 'When you meet a man, have a birthday, demand a present that's hockable, and be careful. ' . .. The Miss Gladyses were usually the type that hung out the window in Apartment 1-A leaning on the pillow giving single-action advice on numbers or giving you advice about how to get your homework done or telling you to stay away from those cruising cars that moved through the neighborhood patrolling little girls. "
As she told Guy-Sheftall, writing at that time seemed to her "rather frivolous . .. something you did because you didn't feel like doing any work. But . .. I've come to appreciate that it is a perfectly legitimate way to participate in a struggle. "
Bambara told Claudia Tate in an interview published in Black Women Writers at Work that when her agent suggested she assemble some old stories for a book, she thought, "Aha, I'll get the old kid stuff out and see if I can't clear some space to get into something else. "
She told Tate in Black Women Writers at Work: "Quite frankly, I've always considered myself a film person. .. . There's not too much more I want to experiment with in terms of writing. It gives me pleasure, insight, keeps me centered, sane. But, oh, to get my hands on some movie equipment. "
Membership
She was a member of the Southern Collective of African-American Writers.
Personality
Quotes from others about the person
According to Deck, Bambara saw the work as "a response to all the male 'experts' both black and white who had been publishing articles and conducting sociological studies on black women. "
Deck wrote that Bambara's inclusion of professional writers and students in a single work "shows her desire to give young writers a chance to make their talents known to a large audience. "
Deck noted that after the publication of her first collection, "major events took place in Toni Cade Bambara's life which were to have an effect on her writing. "
According to Alice A. Deck in the Dictionary of Literary Biography, "in many ways Toni Cade Bambara is one of the best representatives of the group of Afro-American writers who, during the 1966, became directly involved in the cultural and sociopolitical activities in urban communities across the country. "
However, Deck points out that "Bambara is one of the few who continued to work within the black urban communities (filming, lecturing, organizing, and reading from her works at rallies and conferences), producing imaginative reenactments of these experiences in her fiction. In addition, Bambara established herself over the years as an educator, teaching in colleges and independent community schools in various cities on the East Coast. "
Bambara's first two books of fiction, Gorilla, My Love and The Sea Birds Are Still Alive, are collections of her short stories. Susan Lardner remarks in the New Yorker that the stories in these two works, "describing the lives of black people in the North and the South, could be more exactly typed as vignettes and significant anecdotes, although a few of them are fairly long. .. . All are notable for their purposefulness, a more or less explicit inspirational angle, and a distinctive motion of the prose, which swings from colloquial narrative to precarious metaphorical heights and over to street talk, at which Bambara is unbeatable. "
In a review of Gorilla, My Love, for example, a writer remarks in the Saturday Review that the stories "are among the best portraits of black life to have appeared in some time. [They are] written in a breezy, engaging style that owes a good deal to street dialect. "
A critic writing in Newsweek makes a similar observation, describing Bambara's second collection of short stories, The Sea Birds Are Still Alive, in this manner: "Bambara directs her vigorous sense and sensibility to black neighborhoods in big cities, with occasional trips to small Southern towns. .. . The stories start and stop like rapid-fire conversations conducted in a rhythmic, black-inflected, sweet-and-sour language. "
In fact, according to Anne Tyler in the Washington Post Book World, Bambara's particular style of narration is one of the most distinctive qualities of her writing. "What pulls us along is the language of [her] characters, which is startlingly beautiful without once striking a false note, " notes Tyler.
"Everything these people say, you feel, ordinary, real-life people are saying right now on any street corner. It's only that the rest of us didn't realize it was sheer poetry they were speaking. " In terms of plot, Bambara tends to avoid linear development in favor of presenting "situations that build like improvisations of a melody, " as a Newsweek reviewer explains.
Commenting on Gorilla, My Love, Bell Gale Chevigny observes in the Village Voice that despite the "often sketchy" plots, the stories are always "lavish in their strokes-here are elaborate illustrations, soaring asides, aggressive sub-plots. They are never didactic, but they abound in far-out common sense, exotic home truths. "
Numerous reviewers have also remarked on Bambara's sensitive portrayals of her characters and the handling of their situations, portrayals that are marked by an affectionate warmth and pride. Laura Marcus writes in the Times Literary Supplement that Bambara "presents black culture as embattled but unbowed. .. . Bambara depicts black communities in which ties of blood and friendship are fiercely defended. "
Deck expands on this idea, remarking that "the basic implication of all of Toni Cade Bambara's stories is that there is an undercurrent of caring for one's neighbors that sustains black Americans. In her view the presence of those individuals who intend to do harm to people is counterbalanced by as many if not more persons who have a genuine concern for other people. "
C. D. B. Bryan admires this expression of the author's concern for other people, declaring in the New York Times Book Review that "Bambara tells me more about being black through her quiet, proud, silly, tender, hip, acute, loving stories than any amount of literary polemicizing could hope to do. She writes about love: a love for one's family, one's friends, one's race, one's neighborhood and it is the sort of love that comes with maturity and inner peace. "
According to Bryan, "all of [Bambara's] stories share the affection that their narrator feels for the subject, an affection that is sometimes terribly painful, at other times fiercely proud. But at all times it is an affection that is so genuinely genus homo sapiens that her stories are not only black stories. "
In 1980, Bambara published her first novel, a generally well-received work entitled The Salt Eaters. Written in an almost dream-like style, The Salt Eaters explores the relationship between two women with totally different backgrounds and lifestyles brought together by a suicide attempt by one of the women. John Leonard, who describes the book as "extraordinary, " writes in the New York Times that The Salt Eaters "is almost an incantation, poem-drunk, myth-happy, mudcaked, jazz-ridden, prodigal in meanings, a kite and a mask. It astonishes because Toni Cade Bambara is so adept at switching from politics to legend, from particularities of character to prehistorical song, from LaSalle Street to voodoo. It is as if she jived the very stones to groan. "
In a Times Literary Supplement review, Carol Rumens states that The Salt Eaters "is a hymn to individual courage, a sombre message of hope that has confronted the late twentieth-century pathology of racist violence and is still able to articulate its faith in 'the dream. '"
And John Wideman notes in the New York Times Book Review: "In her highly acclaimed fiction and in lectures, [Bambara] emphasizes the necessity for black people to maintain their best traditions, to remain healthy and whole as they struggle for political power. The Salt Eaters, her first novel, eloquently summarizes and extends the abiding concerns of her previous work. "