Susan Sherman was born in
Philadelphia on July 10, 1939, to a first-generation Jewish American mother and father, a Russian Jewish immigrant. Sherman grew up in
Los Angeles, California, and worked on her school's student newspaper in high school. Sherman attended the
University of California at Berkeley, majoring in philosophy and English and graduating with her BA in 1961. She began writing poetry at Berkeley, during the years of the
San Francisco Renaissance, and won the university's Emily Chamberlain Cook Poetry Award in 1960. She also received an MA from
Hunter College in New York in 1967 in philosophy. After graduating from Berkeley, Sherman moved to New York City and became active in the theater, poetry, and activist scenes of the
East Village. She was involved in the literary circles at Les Deux Magots and Le Metro Café, and helped organize readings alongside Allen Katzman,
Paul Blackburn, and
Carol Bergé. Sherman served as the poetry editor for
The Nation and
The Village Voice, to which she also contributed theater reviews and classified ads. In 1967, she attended the
Dialectics of Liberation conference after which she became active in the feminist movement and the
Gay Liberation Movement. In the early 1970s, she also traveled to
Chile while
Salvador Allende was in power. In 1975, she taught at the Feminist institute Sagaris, and in 1984 she was invited to participate in a conference on
Central America and traveled to
Nicaragua with
Adrienne Rich. In 1982, she revived IKON as a second series, this time as a feminist magazine which, like the first series, was dedicated to creativity and social change. After almost twenty years, she returned to Cuba in the 1990s as part of a feminist trip organized by
Margaret Randall.
Booklist,
Publishers Weekly and Lambda Book Review and numerous authors, including Grace Paley,
Claribel Alegria and Chuck Wachtel, and in 2012, her new and selected poems,
The Light that Puts an End to Dreams was a finalist for the Audre Lorde Lesbian Poetry Award. From her early years in the 1980s as a part-time faculty member at
The New School (
Parsons School of Design and
Eugene Lang College), she was active in union organizing, and has remained involved in the continuing struggle to speak to part-time faculty working conditions. Re-energized as ACT-UAW Local 7902, the union finally succeeded in their negotiations for a first contract in 2004. == Publications ==