Recovering a Literary Legacy: The Life of Delores Phillips

IF 0.2 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE
Delia Steverson
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The story takes place in the fictional town of Pakersfield, Georgia, in 1958, and follows Rozelle Quinn—a resourceful yet cruel and manipulative mother—and her ten children as they attempt to reconcile generational trauma and escape racism and poverty in the Jim Crow south. The narrative is told through the lens of Tangy Mae, the titular \"darkest\" of all Rozelle's children, who believes that her education is the quickest pathway for fleeing her abusive household. The novel won the Black Caucus American Library Association First Novelist Award in 2005 and was short-listed for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award that same year. With the reception of The Darkest Child, Phillips appeared to have a promising literary future. But after a short and brutal battle with pancreatic cancer, Delores passed away in relative obscurity at the age of 63 in 2014. I was introduced to The Darkest Child in 2017 by a friend and colleague who knew I was researching representations of disability in African American literature. She suggested that the novel—with its attention to a variety of human experiences, including deafness (one of Rozelle's children is deaf and creates her own form of sign language) and madness (there is debate if Rozelle is \"mad\" or just downright evil)—might be a rich text to enhance my scholarly pursuits. When I read the novel, I found it incredibly poignant, funny, hopeful, and tragic, all at the same time, and I was driven to find out more about this mysterious author. Much to my dismay, other than a short biography [End Page 45] in the back of the book, a bare Wikipedia page, and Phillips's obituary, there seemed to be no substantial information about this formidable artist. Thus armed with Phillips's obituary, I reached out to Shalana on Facebook—and surprisingly, she messaged me back. After a few months of communication, I flew to Cleveland, Ohio, where Shalana and Phillips's sister Linda Miller reside, to discover more about this amazing writer whom I never had the opportunity to meet. Opening their homes and their lives to me through several interviews—over Linda's homemade desserts and Shalana's tuna sandwiches—they shared honest and transparent details about their sister/mother. Over the years, we would sift through boxes of what we would determine were pages of Phillips's unpublished writings, which had been tucked away in Linda's attic for years. As we began to assemble what would become Phillips's archives, including her computer hard drive, magazine clippings, several hundred pages of typescript documents, journal entries, transcripts, and medical documents, I learned that Delores was unequivocally no one-hit wonder. Instead, her literary career spanned her entire lifetime, as she wrote over a dozen poems, a collection of short stories titled The Renwood Circle Stories, and at the time of her death, two additional, albeit unfinished, novels: a sequel to The Darkest Child called Stumbling Blocks, and a standalone novel entitled No Ordinary Rain.2 This investigative journey would not only become a crucial step in recovering her literary legacy, but would also reveal the intricate ways that her experience with chronic illness, medical racism, and personal tragedy underscored the harmony and tensions between her fiction, public persona, and interior self. Delores Faye Phillips was born in Cartersville, Georgia in 1950. The second of four children of Lennie Miller, a brick layer, and Annie Ruth Banks, a domestic laborer, Phillips and her family lived in several of the rural town's segregated spaces. Delores began writing poetry during her childhood, inspired by Annie Ruth...","PeriodicalId":44538,"journal":{"name":"LITERATURE AND MEDICINE","volume":"15 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"LITERATURE AND MEDICINE","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/lm.2023.a911442","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Recovering a Literary Legacy:The Life of Delores Phillips Delia Steverson (bio) In 2002, after suffering a heart attack, author Delores Phillips miraculously drove herself to a Cleveland hospital. Recovering from complications during her hospitalization, Delores later recalled to her only daughter, Shalana Harris, "Man, I should've died." But Shalana rebuffed, "No, there's a reason why you didn't die. You still have more life to live."1 Less than two years later, in 2004, Shalana's prophetic utterances appeared to be fulfilled when Phillips published The Darkest Child, the only novel she would publish in her lifetime. The story takes place in the fictional town of Pakersfield, Georgia, in 1958, and follows Rozelle Quinn—a resourceful yet cruel and manipulative mother—and her ten children as they attempt to reconcile generational trauma and escape racism and poverty in the Jim Crow south. The narrative is told through the lens of Tangy Mae, the titular "darkest" of all Rozelle's children, who believes that her education is the quickest pathway for fleeing her abusive household. The novel won the Black Caucus American Library Association First Novelist Award in 2005 and was short-listed for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award that same year. With the reception of The Darkest Child, Phillips appeared to have a promising literary future. But after a short and brutal battle with pancreatic cancer, Delores passed away in relative obscurity at the age of 63 in 2014. I was introduced to The Darkest Child in 2017 by a friend and colleague who knew I was researching representations of disability in African American literature. She suggested that the novel—with its attention to a variety of human experiences, including deafness (one of Rozelle's children is deaf and creates her own form of sign language) and madness (there is debate if Rozelle is "mad" or just downright evil)—might be a rich text to enhance my scholarly pursuits. When I read the novel, I found it incredibly poignant, funny, hopeful, and tragic, all at the same time, and I was driven to find out more about this mysterious author. Much to my dismay, other than a short biography [End Page 45] in the back of the book, a bare Wikipedia page, and Phillips's obituary, there seemed to be no substantial information about this formidable artist. Thus armed with Phillips's obituary, I reached out to Shalana on Facebook—and surprisingly, she messaged me back. After a few months of communication, I flew to Cleveland, Ohio, where Shalana and Phillips's sister Linda Miller reside, to discover more about this amazing writer whom I never had the opportunity to meet. Opening their homes and their lives to me through several interviews—over Linda's homemade desserts and Shalana's tuna sandwiches—they shared honest and transparent details about their sister/mother. Over the years, we would sift through boxes of what we would determine were pages of Phillips's unpublished writings, which had been tucked away in Linda's attic for years. As we began to assemble what would become Phillips's archives, including her computer hard drive, magazine clippings, several hundred pages of typescript documents, journal entries, transcripts, and medical documents, I learned that Delores was unequivocally no one-hit wonder. Instead, her literary career spanned her entire lifetime, as she wrote over a dozen poems, a collection of short stories titled The Renwood Circle Stories, and at the time of her death, two additional, albeit unfinished, novels: a sequel to The Darkest Child called Stumbling Blocks, and a standalone novel entitled No Ordinary Rain.2 This investigative journey would not only become a crucial step in recovering her literary legacy, but would also reveal the intricate ways that her experience with chronic illness, medical racism, and personal tragedy underscored the harmony and tensions between her fiction, public persona, and interior self. Delores Faye Phillips was born in Cartersville, Georgia in 1950. The second of four children of Lennie Miller, a brick layer, and Annie Ruth Banks, a domestic laborer, Phillips and her family lived in several of the rural town's segregated spaces. Delores began writing poetry during her childhood, inspired by Annie Ruth...
《恢复文学遗产:德洛丽丝·菲利普斯的一生》
2002年,在心脏病发作后,作家德洛丽丝·菲利普斯奇迹般地开车去了克利夫兰的一家医院。德洛丽丝从住院期间的并发症中恢复过来后,后来对她唯一的女儿沙拉纳·哈里斯(Shalana Harris)回忆说:“天哪,我真应该死了。”但沙拉纳拒绝了,“不,你没有死是有原因的。你还有很长的路要走。不到两年后的2004年,莎拉纳的预言似乎应验了,菲利普斯出版了《最黑暗的孩子》,这是她一生中出版的唯一一部小说。故事发生在1958年虚构的乔治亚州帕克斯菲尔德镇,讲述了罗泽尔·奎因——一位足智多谋却又残忍又爱操纵人的母亲——和她的十个孩子试图调和代际创伤,逃离种族主义和南方种族歧视的贫困。故事是通过唐吉·梅(Tangy Mae)的镜头讲述的,她是罗泽尔所有孩子中名义上“最黑暗的”,她认为自己的教育是逃离虐待家庭的最快途径。2005年,这部小说获得了黑人核心小组美国图书馆协会第一小说家奖,并于同年入围赫斯顿/赖特遗产奖。随着《最黑暗的孩子》的畅销,菲利普斯的文学前途一片光明。但在与胰腺癌进行了短暂而残酷的斗争后,德洛丽丝于2014年去世,享年63岁。2017年,一位朋友兼同事向我介绍了《最黑暗的孩子》,他知道我在研究非裔美国文学中的残疾表现。她建议说,这部小说关注各种各样的人类经历,包括耳聋(罗泽尔的一个孩子是聋子,她创造了自己的手语形式)和疯狂(罗泽尔是“疯狂”还是彻头彻尾的邪恶存在争议),这可能是一本丰富的文本,可以增强我的学术追求。当我读这本小说时,我发现它令人难以置信的尖锐、有趣、充满希望和悲剧,所有这些同时发生,我被驱使着去更多地了解这位神秘的作者。令我非常沮丧的是,除了书后面的一篇简短的传记(End Page 45)、一个光秃秃秃的维基百科页面和菲利普斯的讣告之外,似乎没有关于这位令人敬畏的艺术家的实质性信息。因此,拿着菲利普斯的讣告,我在facebook上联系了沙兰娜——令人惊讶的是,她给我回了信息。经过几个月的沟通,我飞往俄亥俄州的克利夫兰,沙兰娜和菲利普斯的妹妹琳达·米勒住在那里,去了解更多关于这位我从未有机会见到的了不起的作家的信息。通过几次采访,他们向我敞开了自己的家和生活——吃着琳达的自制甜点和沙兰娜的金枪鱼三明治——他们诚实而透明地分享了关于他们姐姐/母亲的细节。多年来,我们会在盒子里筛选菲利普斯未发表的作品,这些作品在琳达的阁楼里藏了很多年。当我们开始收集后来成为菲利普斯档案的东西时,包括她的电脑硬盘、杂志剪报、几百页的打字文件、日记、笔录和医疗文件,我了解到德洛丽丝毫无疑问不是一个一次性的奇迹。相反,她的文学生涯贯穿了她的一生,她写了十几首诗,一本短篇小说集《伦伍德圈故事》,在她去世时,她又写了两部小说,尽管尚未完成:《最黑暗的孩子》的续集《绊脚石》和一部独立小说《不寻常的雨》。这次调查之旅不仅是恢复她的文学遗产的关键一步,而且还揭示了她与慢性疾病、医疗种族主义和个人悲剧的复杂经历,这些经历突显了她的小说、公众形象和内心自我之间的和谐与紧张。Delores Faye Phillips于1950年出生在佐治亚州的卡特斯维尔。菲利普斯是砌砖工人莱尼·米勒(Lennie Miller)和家庭佣工安妮·露丝·班克斯(Annie Ruth Banks)四个孩子中的老二,她和家人住在这个乡村小镇的几个隔离区。德洛丽丝童年时受到安妮·露丝的启发,开始写诗。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Literature and Medicine is a journal devoted to exploring interfaces between literary and medical knowledge and understanding. Issues of illness, health, medical science, violence, and the body are examined through literary and cultural texts. Our readership includes scholars of literature, history, and critical theory, as well as health professionals.
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