on the Fall 2009 cover of
Ms. magazine
Civil rights Walker met
Martin Luther King Jr. when she was a student at
Spelman College in the early 1960s. She credits King for her decision to return to the
American South as an activist in the
Civil Rights Movement. She took part in the
1963 March on Washington with hundreds of thousands of people. Later, she volunteered to register Black voters in Georgia and Mississippi. On March 8, 2003,
International Women's Day, on the eve of the
Iraq War, Walker was arrested with 26 others, including fellow authors
Maxine Hong Kingston and
Terry Tempest Williams, at a protest outside the
White House, for crossing a police line during an anti-war rally. Walker wrote about the experience in her essay "We Are the Ones We Have Been Waiting For".
Womanism Walker's specific brand of
feminism included advocacy on behalf of women of color. In 1983, Walker coined the term
womanist in her collection ''
In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens'', to mean "a Black feminist or feminist of color". The term was made to unite women of color and the feminist movement at "the intersection of race, class, and gender oppression". Walker states that "'Womanism' gives us a word of our own". because it is a discourse of Black women and the issues they confront in society. Womanism as a movement came into fruition in 1985 at the
American Academy of Religion and the
Society of Biblical Literature to address Black women's concerns from their own intellectual, physical, and spiritual perspectives."
Feminist advocacy Walker's idea of feminist advocacy emerged in her work, ''
In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens, specifically in the essay, If the Present Looked Like the Past, what would the future Look Like?''. In her piece, she reflects on the modern injustices and historical oppression of the feminist movement. She also touches upon the need for compassion, empathy and awareness on behalf of Black women to overcome the past atrocities such as slavery and colonialism. In the end, the essay provides both a critique on the Black feminist movement and a call to action for readers to liberate themselves from discrimination.
Israeli–Palestinian conflict Walker is a judge member of the
Russell Tribunal on Palestine, and she also supports the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions campaign against Israel. In January 2009, Walker was one of over fifty signatories of a letter protesting against the
Toronto International Film Festival's "City to City" spotlight on Israeli filmmakers, and condemning Israel as an "
apartheid regime". Two months later, Walker and sixty other female activists from the anti-war group
Code Pink traveled to
Gaza in response to the
Gaza War. Their purpose was to deliver aid, meet with NGOs and residents, and persuade Israel and Egypt to open their borders with Gaza. She planned to visit Gaza again in December 2009 to participate in the
Gaza Freedom March. On June 23, 2011, she announced plans to participate in an aid
flotilla to Gaza that attempted to break Israel's naval blockade. In May 2013, Walker posted an open letter to singer
Alicia Keys, asking her to cancel a planned concert in
Tel Aviv. "I believe we are mutually respectful of each other's path and work," Walker wrote. "It would grieve me to know you are putting yourself in danger (soul danger) by performing in an apartheid country that is being boycotted by many global conscious artists." Keys rejected the plea. Walker has refused to allow
The Color Purple to be translated and published in Hebrew, saying that she finds that "Israel is guilty of apartheid and persecution of the Palestinian people, both inside Israel and also in the Occupied Territories" and noting that she had refused to allow
Steven Spielberg's film adaptation of her novel to be shown in South Africa until the system of
apartheid was dismantled.
Support for Chelsea Manning and Julian Assange In June 2013, Walker and others appeared in a video expressing their support for
Chelsea Manning, an American soldier who was imprisoned for releasing
classified information. In recent years, Walker has spoken out repeatedly in support of
Julian Assange. Founder of Wikileaks, Assange was considered a large threat to U.S. national security during the Obama administration, as he revealed classified intelligence information surrounding war crimes and human rights violations in
Iraq,
Afghanistan, and
Guantanamo Bay. Subsequently, Assange was arrested after attempting to seek refuge in the Ecuador embassy in London. He was later extradited to the U.S. and prosecuted on criminal charges. In light of these developments, Alice Walker published an Opinion Editorial taking aim at the US justice system and calling for the vindication of the charges brought against Assange. Moreover, Walker also took part in a panel discussion in Berkeley, California for the purpose of freeing Assange.
Animal advocacy Walker has expressed that
animal advocacy is one of her central concerns. Her fiction has increasingly embraced
animal ethics over the past four decades, as she works to include animals as both active participants in her novels and as symbols for what she has called "consciousness." Her earliest fiction represents nonhuman animals inasmuch as they are part of human life – namely as farmed animals, food sources, and absent referents for animalized
epithets directed at humans, and her fiction increasingly incorporates the animal experience. She has advocated for greater consciousness in human beings and their relationships with animals, stating: "Encouraging others to love nature, to respect other human beings and animals, to adore this earth, is part of my work in this world."
Pacifism Walker has been a longtime sponsor of the
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. In early 2015, she wrote: "So I think of any movement for peace and justice as something that is about stabilizing our inner spirit so that we can go on and bring into the world a vision that is much more humane than the one we have dominant today." She has written several works that convey her pacifist views, those including
The Same River Twice and
We are the Ones We have been Waiting for: Inner Light in a Time of Darkness. She discusses the importance for establishing an equitable and peaceful society.
Transgender rights In 2023, Walker publicly defended
J. K. Rowling from criticisms of her views regarding trans people. Walker wrote on her website: "I consider J.K. Rowling perfectly within her rights as a human being of obvious caring for humanity to express her views about whatever is of concern to her. As she has done." She herself expressed the view that women were being "erased" in language, dictionaries and society, and that "confusion" with respect to gender had led to hasty
sex reassignment surgeries, at least when minors were concerned. Walker was criticized on social media for taking this position with many referring to her as a
TERF. In a subsequent essay, Walker addressed trans people, stating: "I fully understand that your life belongs to you; therefore whatever changes you make, I offer my prayers for a beautiful transformation and complete recovery", and acknowledged that one of the "most loving and balanced people" she knew was a trans man. == Accusations of antisemitism and praise for David Icke ==