Nikki Giovanni Biography
Nikki Giovanni was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and grew up in the all-black neighborhood of Lincoln Heights in Cincinnati, Ohio. Her summers were spent at her grandparentsâ home in Knoxville, where she eventually moved to attend high school. Encouraged to become part of an early matriculation program at seventeen, Giovanni attended Fisk University, her grandfatherâs alma mater, from which she graduated in 1967. Giovanni came from a family of teachers who valued education and expected their children to follow in grandparentsâ (John Brown and Emma Lou Watson) and parentsâ (Gus and Yolanda Giovanni) footsteps and get university degrees.
From the beginning, âNikki,â as her sister Gary christened her eschewing the âYolande Cornelia Giovanni, Jr.â her parents officially named her, was cast as an original and the mold then discarded. As a child, she was a risk taker, highly intelligent, immensely creative, charismatic, and a lover of language. Influenced by her fiery, outspoken and free-thinking grandmother Emma Lou, Giovanni became a singular, individualistic childâher mentor and middle school teacher Sister Althea Augustine writing of her: â. . . she was a brilliant, precocious child, an avid reader and independent thinker and doer. She would come to school at her convenience and leave the same regardless of school regulationsâ (qdt. in Virginia Fowlerâs Nikki Giovanni, A Literary Biography). Early on Giovanni became fascinated by the grace, intrepidity, and shear stamina of her people in the face of social injustice, and it was clear that no common path would be hers.
After graduating from Fisk, Giovanni published her first book, Black Feeling Black Talk (1967), and after a short stint in the Social Work program at the University of Pennsylvania and another at the School of Fine Arts at Columbia University in an MFA program where she was told she couldnât write, she moved to New York where she settled into what she knew very well she could do better than anyone else and soon made a name for herself as part of the Black Arts Movement. It took only the publicâs becoming aware of her now two collections of poetry (Black Judgment 1968) for her to be embraced as a new kind of American poet, not obscure and university pampered but a poet of the people. Black Feeling, Black Talk sold over 10,000 copies while Giovanni was organizing for the Black Arts Movement and living in New York; that exposure and the interest of the New York Times was all it took for Giovanni to begin to make a name for herself. During the 1970s, she co-founded a publishing company, NikTom, Ltd, that encouraged and published African American women writers, among whom were Gwendolyn Brooks, Margaret Walker, and Mari Evans. Giovanni had become a cultural and literary force to be reckoned with.
Over the years since, Giovanni has been incredibly prolific, publishing more than thirty volumes of nonfiction, poetry, books for children, and essays. Her autobiography, Gemini, was a finalist for the National Book Award; Love Poems, Blues: For All the Changes, Quilting the Black-Eyed Pea, and Bicycles were significant in garnering for her a number of NAACP Image Awards. Giovanni was recipient of the Rosa Parks Woman of Courage Award and the Langston Hughes Medal for Outstanding Poetry. In 2004, she was nominated for a Grammy for her poetry collection on CD, Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection. Today, Giovanni holds the Distinguished Professor in English position at Virginia Tech.
Giovanniâs poetry is immensely accessible and very much informed by the oral tradition. From volume to volume, the reader can discern an evolution of thought and a range of subjects but always there has been a consistent, distinctive, and recognizable voice. That voice speaks to the real and to the moment, being at the same time both topical and true to the African American experience and heritage with its complex and distinctive historyâconsistent with what one would expect from a writer whose craft was honed in the Black Arts Movement of the 1970s. Reading Giovanni, one is submerged in such immediacy and truth that the colloquial language she purposefully employs belies the complexity and profundity of her ideas. The end product, however, is that her poetry is immensely accessible, likable, and memorable, even as she slips a thought or a phrase that smacks one to the heartâs core.
Giovanni is unapologetically political, deeply defiant, and as one critic has written âunabashedly Afrocentric.â And yet, lost in that voice and consumed by such a genuine personality, one is seduced by its authenticity and the empathy that emanates from her words. Her poems deal with gender topics, re-visioning the Black family, social injustice, the everyday and everyway of Black life, art, and poetry. Whether we are Black, White, or somewhere in between, she makes us do a double-take on our accepted ideas about convention and the way we think things are. For example, her volume Love Poems (1997) is essentially an elegy for Tupac Shakur. Writing about her âhip-hopâ apologia, she has said that she would ârather be with the thugs than the people who are complaining about them.â And the discerning reader feels likewise.
While there is no denying Giovanniâs feminismâher brilliant dialectic and dialogue with James Baldwin providing a superb exampleâshe is âlargeâ enough in âthe multitudes she containsâ to concede to ideas that stretch her own understanding; and some of her most brilliant and touching poems have been in defense of Black men (âBeautiful Black Menâ). She uses the English language which she admits âisnât a good language to express emotionâ and consumes us with emotion (âMy Houseâ line 30). Her poetry is informed by the spirituals, jazz, and blues that have come from the Black experience, and indeed one of her best CDs, Truth Is On Its Way, is a marriage of poetry and ethnic American music that gives one both an African and an Appalachian American experience.
Giovanni has said that the ability of her people to survive, to thrive, to profoundly influence American culture and the literary landscape, and to prevail in the racially charged and polarized culture that is America has fascinated her from the beginning, and as we read her vast and fearless canon, we are equally enthralled.