Respuesta :

Answer:

Explanation:

It is a powerful essay that defines women's unity, a form of movement that goes beyond sexism

Audre Lorde in “Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference,” Urge women to recognize all forms of oppression—such as racism, ageism, and heterosexism—and to wake up to how one’s different experiences and backgrounds can serve as tools for societal change. Not only does Lorde explicitly tell us this, but she also shows it to us in her own writing choices. Although prose and poetry are structurally different, they can work in the same piece when they share the same language and themes. They can reclaim the value of work and the people who perform that labor. Lorde’s writing is as reluctant as she is to single out one feature as a representation of a whole identity.

Audre Lorde achieved this by speaking from her own perspective being a black lesbian, which brings some overlooked issues to light and many of the misconceptions and beliefs held by white and black women alike.

She discussed how often class and race are linked to the production of various forms of literature.

Unlike most writers commit to the conventions of the single genre in which they are composing, Audre Lorde in “Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference” does not seem to discriminate between poetry and prose, The author notes in her essay that others often encourage her to single out one component of her identity and put it forward as a depiction of her whole self