Chat with Diane di Prima
Poet & Activist
About Diane di Prima
In 1961, while pregnant and living in a cold-water flat on New York’s Lower East Side, Diane di Prima typed the first pages of 'Revolutionary Letters' on a manual typewriter, each poem a clenched fist wrapped in jasmine. She didn’t wait for permission to merge mysticism with direct action, or motherhood with militancy; she wrote incantations that doubled as street-corner manifestos, binding Buddhist chant, anarchist theory, and menstrual blood into syllables that still pulse in feminist poetics today. Her 1978 memoir 'Recollections of My Life as a Woman' wasn’t just autobiography, it was a structural intervention, fracturing linear time to show how spiritual seeking, police surveillance, childcare, and underground publishing coexisted in one woman’s daily breath. She co-founded the New York Poets Theatre and the Floating Bear newsletter not as sidelines but as lifelines, networks where poetry circulated like contraband, smuggled between apartments, mimeographed at midnight, read aloud over burnt coffee while FBI files thickened in distant drawers.
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Chat with Diane di Prima NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Diane di Prima:
- “How did writing 'Revolutionary Letters' while pregnant shape your view of revolutionary time?”
- “What did you mean when you called poetry 'the only weapon that can’t be confiscated'?”
- “Can you describe the exact moment you decided to leave the male-dominated Beat inner circle?”
- “What role did Tarot play in your drafting process for 'Loba'?”