Rita Mae Brown (born November 28, 1944) is an American feminist writer, best known for her coming-of-age autobiographical novel, Rubyfruit Jungle. Brown was active in a number of civil rights campaigns and criticized the marginalization of lesbians within feminist groups. Brown received the Pioneer Award for lifetime achievement at the Lambda Literary Awards in 2015. She is considered a significant Southern lesbian feminist poet and author and is associated with the women's liberation movement and women in print movement.

Biography

Early life

Brown was born in 1944 in Hanover, Pennsylvania, to an unmarried teenage mother and her married boyfriend. and raised her as their own in York, Pennsylvania, and later in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Julia and Ralph Brown were active Republicans in their local party.

Education

Starting in late 1962, Brown attended the University of Florida on a scholarship. In the spring of 1964, the administrators of the racially segregated university expelled her for participating in the civil rights movement. with the hope of transferring eventually to a more tolerant four-year institution.

Early career

Brown hitchhiked to New York City and lived there between 1964 and 1969, sometimes homeless, while attending New York University, where she received a degree in classics and English. In 1968, she received a certificate in cinematography from the New York School of Visual Arts. Brown worked as a photo editor at Sterling Publishing from 1969 to 1970.

Brown received a Ph.D. in literature from Union Institute & University in 1976 and holds a doctorate in political science. She was a lecturer in sociology at Federal City College from 1970 to 1971, a research fellow at the Institute for Policy Studies from 1971 to 1973, and visiting faculty at Goddard College beginning in 1973.

Brown wrote for Rat, an alternative bi-weekly that eventually became New York City's first women's liberation newspaper. She also contributed to Come Out!, the gay liberation newspaper in NYC, published by the Gay Liberation Front.

Later career

In 1982, Brown wrote a screenplay parodying the slasher genre titled Sleepless Nights; retitled The Slumber Party Massacre, the producers decided to play it seriously, and it was given a limited release theatrically. Brown is featured in the feminist history film She's Beautiful When She's Angry.

Writings

Brown was associated with the women in print movement, which sought to establish autonomous communications networks of feminist publications, presses, and bookstores created by and for women. As part of The Furies Collective, Brown contributed to The Furies, a newspaper with a national circulation from 1972 to 1973. Brown also chose to publish her works through feminist presses. Her first novel, Rubyfruit Jungle, was published by Daughters, Inc. in 1973. Now considered a classic lesbian coming of age novel, it was an immediate success, selling 60,000 copies in two years, primarily through word of mouth. Rubyfruit Jungle had a comical, picaresque style that reviewers compared to Mark Twain. Brown published her second novel, In Her Day, through Daughters and her first poetry collection, The Hand That Cradles the Rock, with Diana Press Publications, another feminist publisher.

After the inaugural Women in Print Conference in 1976, Daughters, Inc. began to receive national attention, partly due to the success of Rubyfruit Jungle. Daughters founder June Arnold was a feminist separatist who believed that working with male collaborators and mainstream publishers would taint the cause of the women's liberation movement. However, soon after vowing in The New York Times that she would not sell reprint rights to a traditional publisher, Arnold sold the reprint rights for Rubyfruit Jungle to Bantam Books for $250,000. Brown was in favor of the sale due to the financial stability it provided her. Arnold and Daughters, Inc. were widely criticized in many feminist outlets.

Later in her career, Brown published her works with mainstream publishers, including Bantam and Ballantine Books, though she continued to engage with feminist themes across many genres, including historical fiction, mystery, and memoir. She is considered a significant Southern lesbian poet and writer.

Philosophical and political views

In the spring of 1964, during her study at the University of Florida in Gainesville, she became active in the American Civil Rights Movement. Later in the 1960s, she participated in the anti-war movement, the feminist movement and the Lesbian Liberation movement. She was involved with the Student Homophile League at Columbia University in 1967 but left it because the men in the league were not interested in women's rights.

She was involved in the Redstockings, but also left the group because of its lack of involvement in lesbian rights. Brown claimed that lesbian was "the one word that can cause the Executive Committee [of NOW] a collective heart attack."

Brown played a leading role in the "Lavender Menace" zap of the Second Congress to Unite Women on May 1, 1970, which protested Friedan's remarks and the exclusion of lesbians from the women's movement. Brown and other lesbians from the Gay Liberation Front created The Woman-Identified Woman, which was distributed at the zap. The group that wrote the manifesto then went on to become the "Radicalesbians".</blockquote> Brown also does not consider herself a "lesbian writer" because she believes art is about connection and not about divisive labels.</blockquote>

Honors, decorations, awards and distinctions

Brown received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Arts Council to publish her novel Six of One.

In 1982, Brown was nominated for an Emmy for Outstanding Writing in a Variety or Music Program for I Love Liberty, and again for the ABC mini-series The Long Hot Summer in 1985.

She was co-winner of the 1982 Writers Guild of America Award for I Love Liberty,

In 2015, Brown was presented the Pioneer Award for lifetime achievement at the 27th Lambda Literary Awards.

In addition, Brown was nominated for an Audie award, and won both AudioFile Earphones and Publishers Weekly Listen-Up awards.

Brown received an honorary doctorate from Wilson College in 1992. In 1978, she moved to Charlottesville, Virginia, where she lived briefly with American actress, author, and screenwriter Fannie Flagg, whom she had met at a Los Angeles party hosted by Marlo Thomas. They later broke up due to, according to Brown, "generational differences", although Flagg and Brown are the same age.

In 1979, Brown met and fell in love with tennis champion Martina Navratilova.

Archives

The University of Virginia holds Brown's papers, which comprise 188 boxes. The collection includes manuscripts of Brown's writings, diaries, correspondence, personal papers, and legal files.

Published works

Poetry

  • "Dancing the shout to the true gospel or The song movement sisters don't want me to sing" was included in the 1970 anthology Sisterhood Is Powerful: An Anthology of Writings from the Women's Liberation Movement, edited by Robin Morgan.
  • The Hand That Cradles the Rock (1971).
  • Songs to a Handsome Woman (1973).
  • Poems (1987)

Novels

  • Rubyfruit Jungle (1973)
  • In Her Day (1976)
  • A Plain Brown Rapper (June 1976)
  • Southern Discomfort (1983)
  • Sudden Death (1984)
  • High Hearts (1987)
  • Venus Envy (1994)
  • Dolley: A Novel of Dolley Madison in Love and War (1995)
  • Riding Shotgun (1996)
  • Alma Mater (2002)

Runnymede books

  • Six of One (1978)
  • Bingo (1988)
  • Loose Lips (1999)
  • The Sand Castle (2008)
  • Cakewalk (2016)

Mysteries

;Mrs. Murphy Mysteries

The Mrs. Murphy Mysteries include "Sneaky Pie Brown" as a co-author.

  1. Wish You Were Here (1990)
  2. Rest in Pieces (1992)
  3. Murder at Monticello (1994)
  4. Pay Dirt (1995)
  5. Murder, She Meowed (1996)
  6. Murder on the Prowl (1998)
  7. Cat on the Scent (1999)
  8. Pawing Through the Past (2000)
  9. Claws and Effect (2001)
  10. Catch as Cat Can (2002)
  11. The Tail of the Tip-Off (2003)
  12. Whisker of Evil (2004)
  13. Cat's Eyewitness (2005)
  14. Sour Puss (2006)
  15. Puss n' Cahoots (2007)
  16. The Purrfect Murder (2008)
  17. Santa Clawed (2008)
  18. Cat of the Century (2010)
  19. Hiss of Death (2011)
  20. The Big Cat Nap (2012)
  21. Sneaky Pie for President (2012) / — Not a Mrs. Murphy mystery
  22. The Litter of the Law (2013)
  23. Nine Lives to Die (2014)
  24. Tail Gait (2015)
  25. Tall Tail (2016)
  26. A Hiss Before Dying (2017)
  27. Probable Claws (2018)
  28. Whiskers in the Dark (2019)
  29. Furmidable Foes (2020)
  30. Claws for Alarm (2021)
  31. Hiss and Tell (2023)
  32. Feline Fatale (2024)

"Sister" Jane Mysteries

  1. Outfoxed (2000)
  2. Hotspur (2002)
  3. Full Cry (2003)
  4. The Hunt Ball (2005)
  5. The Hounds and the Fury (2006)
  6. The Tell-Tale Horse (2007)
  7. Hounded to Death (2008)
  8. Fox Tracks (2012)
  9. Let Sleeping Dogs Lie (2014)
  10. Crazy Like a Fox (2017)
  11. Homeward Hound (2018)
  12. Scarlet Fever (2019)
  13. Out of Hounds (2021)
  14. Thrill of the Hunt (2022)
  15. Lost and Hound (2023)

Mags Rogers Mysteries

  1. A Nose for Justice (2010)
  2. Murder Unleashed (2010)

Nonfiction

  • Starting from Scratch: A Different Kind of Writer's Manual (1988).
  • Rita Will: Memoir of a Literary Rabble-Rouser (1997).
  • Sneaky Pie's Cookbook For Mystery Lovers (1999).
  • Animal Magnetism: My Life with Creatures Great and Small (2009).

Screenplays

  • I Love Liberty (1982; TV special)
  • The Slumber Party Massacre (1982; feature film)
  • The Long Hot Summer (1985; TV movie)
  • My Two Loves (1986; TV movie)
  • Me and Rubyfruit (1989; short film interpretation of Rubyfruit Jungle)
  • Rich Men, Single Women (1990; TV movie)
  • The Woman Who Loved Elvis (1993; TV movie)
  • Mary Pickford: A Life on Film (1997; documentary)
  • Murder She Purred: A Mrs. Murphy Mystery (1998; TV movie)

See also

  • Lesbian Poetry

References

  • Interview with Rita Mae Brown by Blase DiStefano in OutSmart magazine (January 1998)
  • Video of Rita Mae Brown talking about her book, The Hounds and the Fury, fox hunting, and animals in general (November 2006)
  • Rita Mae Brown papers at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections Library, University of Virginia
  • Governor for a Day – 1962 account of 17-year-old Brown serving as stand-in for Florida Governor C. Farris Bryant
  • She's Beautiful When She's Angry (film website) for 2014 documentary film including interviews with Brown about her activist work
  • NPR Interviews with Rita Mae Brown