House Celebrates Broadside Lotus
Poets & Writers Magazine|November - December 2020
After founding the Detroit-based Broadside Press in 1965, Dudley Randall wrote: “We (Africans in the United States) are a nation of twenty-two million souls, larger than Athens in the age of Pericles or England in the age of Elizabeth. There is no reason why we should not create and support a literature which will be to our own nation what those literatures were to theirs.”
By India Gonzalez
House Celebrates Broadside Lotus

Broadside grew during the Black Arts Movement as a leading press that introduced unknown voices in poetry to the literary world and in 2015 merged with fellow independent publisher Lotus Press, becoming Broadside Lotus Press. Today, Dr. Gloria House, senior editor and vice president at the press, continues its mission to celebrate African American literary excellence, work she began as a volunteer at the press in the 1970s. A poet in her own right, House has published four books under her chosen African name, Aneb Kgositsile. She is also an educator, an activist, and co-founder of the Detroit Coalition Against Police Brutality. Recently House spoke about the history of Black independent publishers and the future and legacy of Broadside Lotus Press as it celebrates fifty-five years.

What role have Broadside Lotus Press and other independent Black publishers played within the literary community over the years?

This story is from the November - December 2020 edition of Poets & Writers Magazine.

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This story is from the November - December 2020 edition of Poets & Writers Magazine.

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