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Campus & Community

In Memoriam: Minnie Bruce Pratt

Wednesday, July 26, 2023, By Eileen Korey
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College of Arts and SciencesFaculty and Staff NewsLGBTQ

In a welcome note on her , Minnie Bruce Pratt invited visitors to make themselves at home. 鈥淚 hope you enjoy all the connections here to art, politics, love and life,鈥� she wrote. The retired 黑料不打烊 professor built a career and a life of connections that advanced social justice causes and raised awareness of intersectional identities combining race, sexuality, gender and class.

A women poses for a headshot while sitting indoors.

Minnie Bruce Pratt

Pratt died on July 2 at the age of 76. According to an in The New York Times, her death was caused by glioblastoma. A few weeks before her death, her sons Ben and Ransom Weaver that she was 鈥渇ree of pain and surrounded by loving friends and family.鈥� It was a poignant post by the sons she fought for but lost custody of after she came out as a lesbian in the mid-1970s. In North Carolina where she lived at the time, same-sex relationships were considered a crime.

Pratt was already a renowned feminist, poet, essayist and activist when she came to 黑料不打烊 in 2005, with a joint appointment as a professor in the departments of writing and women鈥檚 studies.聽She began her 黑料不打烊 tenure teaching two courses: Nation, Sex, Sexuality: Critical Perspectives on Contemporary Life in the U.S. in the women鈥檚 studies program and Narratives of Power in the writing program. She was a key architect in the 2006 launch of the in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Pratt also co-chaired and keynoted numerous academic conferences, served as an affiliated faculty member in disability studies, and lent her expertise to major programs and initiatives, including the University鈥檚 Future of Minority Studies Project and the Stone Canoe arts journal.聽 At a retirement celebration to honor her decade of teaching at 黑料不打烊, she was credited with helping the University be named as one of the nation鈥檚 top-50 LGBT-friendly institutions.

Pratt was born Sept. 12, 1946, in Selma, Alabama, and attended a segregated high school. She earned a B.A. from the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, where she was also Phi Beta Kappa, and a Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Prior to 黑料不打烊, she taught at the University of Maryland-College Park and was the Jane Watson Irwin Chair of Women鈥檚 Studies at Hamilton College.

She was a member of Feminary, a feminist journal and collective. She co-authored 鈥淵ours In Struggle: Three Feminist Perspectives On Anti-Semitism and Racism,鈥� chosen in 2004 as one of the 100 Best Lesbian and Gay Nonfiction Books of all time by the Publishing Triangle.

Pratt published eight books of poetry: 鈥淭he Sound of One Fork,鈥� 鈥淲e Say We Love Each Other,鈥� 鈥淐rime Against Nature,鈥� 鈥淲alking Back Up Depot Street,鈥� 鈥淭he Dirt She Ate: Selected and New Poems,鈥� 鈥淚nside the Money Machine鈥� and 鈥淢agnified.鈥澛犫€淐rime Against Nature,鈥� on Pratt’s relationship to her two sons as a lesbian mother, was chosen as the Lamont Poetry Selection by the Academy of American Poets, an annual award given for the best second full-length book of poetry by a U.S. author. 鈥淐rime Against Nature鈥� was also chosen as a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and given the American Library Association Gay and Lesbian Book Award for Literature. 鈥淭he Dirt She Ate鈥� received the 2003 Lambda Literary Award for Poetry and the Lucille Medwick Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America.聽Pratt also received a Lillian Hellman-Dashiell Hammett award given by the Fund for Free Expression to writers “who have been victimized by political persecution.”

Pratt鈥檚 book of autobiographical and political essays, 鈥淩ebellion: Essays 1980-1991,鈥� was a finalist in nonfiction for the Lambda Literary Awards. This volume includes her essay “Identity: Skin Blood Heart,” which was adopted for teaching use in hundreds of college courses and community groups.

Pratt with these words published on her website: 鈥淭he struggle鈥攆or social justice and for workers and oppressed people, against racism and imperialism and for liberation for women and all gender and sexually-oppressed people鈥攊s my life.鈥� And though she was determined through her work to educate and raise consciousness, that wasn鈥檛 enough: 鈥淲e must act on what we understand to be unjust, or our hard-won consciousness is useless, nothing more than sand running back and forth through an hourglass.鈥�

Pratt was predeceased by her longtime partner, author and trans activist Leslie Feinberg and is survived by her two sons, their partners and five grandchildren.

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Eileen Korey

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