Pro Femina
by
Carolyn Kizer
Price
30 pages, $8.95 paper
ISBN
1-886157-30-8
A first-wave feminist Ur-text. . . --Publishers Weekly
It's an extraordinary piece of writing, unlike anything else I know in
literature Powerful in its argument, witty and appealing in its manner,
and very, very well written. --Hayden Carruth
Elegant teacher and metrical matriarch, Kizer can argue with anyone in
history on our behalf. She is my personal Roman and Greek "great," my
American Feminist-next-door. --Sandra McPherson
The publication of Carolyn Kizer's Pro Femina sequence in book form
is an event that calls for champagne, essays, discussions, a prize or
two: above all, celebration. Kizer is one of our finest poets, a fact
from which we should not be distracted by the pendant ones of her being
a great wit and a great diplomat of the republic of letters. The first
three sections of Pro Femina were a feminist call to arms in the 1960s,
enunciated with such finesse, all the verve and humor we are still
reproached with lacking, that it is heard as clearly by new readers
today. "Fanny" is a triumph of the dramatic monologue, a novelist's or
biographer's recreation of an extraordinary woman, a place and a time in
the space of a long poem, also a document of how women survive. And
Kizer's new poem ["The Erotic Philosophers"] will lead her readers to
disagree with one of its concluding lines: Carolyn Kizer, woman and
poet, IS one of our major literary philosophers. --Marilyn Hacker
Pro Femina is a poem that every woman whose spirit has been damaged
by deferring to the male should read. Men could read it too--it might
open their eyes and improve their performance. I particularly liked
the part about Robert Louis Stevenson's wife Fanny that tells how a
woman of feeling and intellect made a life of her own. Kizer is
exceptionally well informed. Her poetry is vigorous and full of
memorable sentences. --Louis Simpson

Celebrated poet Carolyn Kizer won the Pulitzer Prize in 1985(YIN) and has received other honors and awards from the National Academy, The Poetry Society of America and the Theodore Roethke Foundation. She has taught at many universities, including Columbia, Princeton and Stanford. Her most recent book is
Harping On: Poems 1985-1995.