Icons: 50 Heroines Who Shaped Contemporary Culture
By Micaela Heekin and Monica Ahanonu
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About this ebook
This diverse and inclusive collection features the world's most inspiring women, including Michelle Obama, Beyonce, Aretha Franklin, Dolly Parton, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Yayoi Kusama and so many more.
From singers to writers, activists to artists, politicians to filmmakers, Icons is a celebration of the strength of women. Illustrated by Monica Ahanonu, each portrait is accompanied by a short biography about what makes each woman a force to be reckoned with.
• Share it with other women in your life: mom-to-daughter, daughter-to-mom, friend-to-friend
• Read about the lives and accomplishments of each woman, or simply enjoy the enigmatic portraits.
Ahanonu's illustrated portraits are both easily recognizable and also an artistic take on each featured woman's likeness and identity.
• A smart and empowering collection of female role models
• Perfect for those who loved In the Company of Women: Inspiration and Advice from over 100 Makers, Artists, and Entrepreneurs by Grace Bonney and Bygone Badass Broads: 52 Forgotten Women Who Changed the World by Mackenzi Lee
Micaela Heekin
Micaela Heekin is a writer who lives and works in San Francisco, California.
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Icons - Micaela Heekin
table of contents
Adele
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
Maya Angelou
Ruth Asawa
Beyoncé
Cher
Hillary Clinton
Amal Clooney
Misty Copeland
Sofia Coppola
Laverne Cox
Ellen DeGeneres
Joan Didion
Ava DuVernay
Aretha Franklin
Lady Gaga
Ruth Bader Ginsburg
Jane Goodall
Zaha Hadid
Audrey Hepburn
Whitney Houston
Grace Jones
Frida Kahlo
Mindy Kaling
Rei Kawakubo
Grace Kelly
Yayoi Kusama
Jennifer Lopez
Madonna
Marilyn Monroe
Lupita Nyong’o
Michelle Obama
Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
Queen Elizabeth II
Rosa Parks
Dolly Parton
Rihanna
Diana Ross
J.K. Rowling
Nina Simone
Gloria Steinem
Meryl Streep
Tilda Swinton
Agnès Varda
Emma Watson
Serena Williams
Amy Winehouse
Oprah Winfrey
Anna Wintour
Malala Yousafzai
Bibliography
ADELE
Adele is a reluctant diva. Her talent and her success have made her a household name in the truest sense—no last name needed. Yet when she says she never in a million years thought this would happen to me,
it’s utterly believable. Adele Adkins was raised between North London and Brighton, and she claims to still be worried that she’s on a hidden camera show, and soon someone will come to tell her it’s time to go back to Tottenham.
A couple of topics come up over and over again when Adele speaks to the press—she talks about becoming a mother, her crippling stage fright, the pitfalls of fame, and the revelation that came when she began writing songs. The one thing she doesn’t talk too much about is her voice. Listening to Adele sing feels like riding a rollercoaster; she swirls and dips and soars, and just when it feels like you might leave the earth entirely, she swoops back down to leave you breathless and wondering, What just happened? And yet, to Adele, it’s just her voice.
That said, she definitely doesn’t take caring for it for granted—she was devastated to have to cancel shows at Wembley Stadium in London when she learned she’d damaged her vocal cords and needed surgery to repair them. She couldn’t speak, let alone sing, while she recovered. So she is careful with her voice, and she worries about it. But the how or the why of it, where did that sheer beauty and brilliance of sound come from? Radio silence.
Adele signed with XL recordings after graduating from school, and she released 19 two years later. 21 and 25 followed, each album more shockingly successful than the last. Prince Charles awarded Adele the MBE in 2013 for services to music, and her albums are some of the best-selling of all time. But still, she says, My career is not my life. It’s my hobby.
She eschews anything that might garner her more
—more fame (openings and events), more money (she says she’ll never be the face of
such and such a fashion house). Instead Adele relishes the private life she has maintained while rocketing to fame. It’s a retreat from the frenzy of celebrity, and a way to stay in touch with how regular people live. How am I supposed to write a record that people can relate to if I’m doing unrelatable things. It’s impossible.
While she protects her reality for the sake of her sanity and her songwriting, Adele says her ability to compose songs that touch so many people remains somewhat mysterious to her. She claims not to have a gift for language when she’s speaking, but says her head comes alive
when it’s time to write music. Whatever it is she does to compose the likes of Hello
and Rolling in the Deep,
let’s hope she keeps doing it for many years to come.
CHIMAMANDA NGOZI ADICHIE
If Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie is her writing career, she is insightful, successful, and award-winning. If she is her speeches, she is a feminist and storyteller, both inspiring and forward-thinking. If she is her physical presence, she is bright, to the point, and well-spoken. Chimamanda is a Nigerian who has lived in America, and an American college student who has lived in Nigeria. She is an observer—of racial injustice, of gender inequality, and of human nature. She is a novelist, an essayist, a feminist, and a mother.
Chimamanda was born in Nigeria in 1977. Her father was a college professor at the University of Nigeria and her mother worked at the school as registrar. Education was prioritized, and Chimamanda was an excellent student. She briefly studied medicine—the sciences were emphasized in Nigeria—before leaving for America, where she studied communications. All the while, she wrote. She wrote a small book of poetry at seventeen, wrote for journals and magazines in Nigeria and America, and was already writing her first novel, Purple Hibiscus, when she graduated from Eastern Connecticut State University summa cum laude.
Chimamanda received her master’s in creative writing from Johns Hopkins in 2003. She went on to receive a master’s in African studies from Yale, and then to receive fellowships from Harvard and Princeton. She was granted a MacArthur Fellowship, informally known as The Genius Grant,
in 2008.
In a Ted Talk, titled, The Danger of a Single Story, Adichie speaks of meeting her American college roommate. Her roommate’s questions revealed that she had a single story of Africa—she expected Chimamanda to listen to tribal music, not Mariah Carey; she was surprised that Chimamanda spoke English so well, confused that English was the official language of Nigeria. How could an African nineteen-year-old possibly have anything in common with an American nineteen-year-old year old? Chimamanda also speaks of her own surprise as a young girl when she learned that her family’s servant had a brother who made beautiful baskets. All Chimamanda knew of the servant was that he was poor, and that his family welcomed handouts and castoffs. That they possessed artistry was unthinkable. In her mind, they were poor—end of story.
Chimamanda’s sense of this type of shortsightedness, how it colors our human experience, is never so clear as it is in her stories. Her characters are complicated and multidimensional, and their true natures are often hidden, even from themselves. But as a writer, Chimamanda has the power to ensure that the reader sees all sides of their stories.
After publishing Half of a Yellow Son (2006), The Thing around Your Neck (2009), and Americanah (2013), Chimamanda wrote essays on feminism. Each novel she has written has been more ambitious in scope than the last, taking on larger and more difficult aspects of the Nigerian experience. Perhaps more essays on feminism are in her future, or more novels and short stories, or more speeches. One thing is for certain: she has more stories to tell.
MAYA ANGELOU
Imagine a life so full, so varied that seven autobiographies don’t do it justice. Maya Angelou was a poet, a civil rights activist, a dancer, a teacher, and an actress. When she was sixteen years old, she worked as the first black female cable car conductor in San Francisco. She wrote and directed films. She worked as a journalist. She was Martin Luther King, Jr.’s colleague when she worked for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. She danced with Alvin Ailey in San Francisco and wrote alongside James Baldwin in Harlem. She performed the role of Kunte Kinte’s grandmother in the acclaimed television show Roots, and was the White Queen in Jean Genet’s off-Broadway production of The Blacks. She taught and lectured at Wake Forest University. She made Tupac Shakur cry.
Maya was born Marguerite Annie Johnson in St. Louis in 1928. The story goes that her beloved older brother, Bailey, called her Maya as a diminutive of My Sister
—or Mya Sister.
Maya and Bailey were incredibly close throughout their lives, a connection likely forged because the siblings were sent back and forth between St. Louis and Stamps, Arkansas, as children. Maya chronicled her childhood in her first and most famous autobiography, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Though she suffered sexual abuse and overt racism as a child, Maya had her brother and her grandmother and her great uncle, and she had literature and poetry, and she took the trauma she experienced and used it to hone a will so strong that activists will stand on her shoulders for generations to come.
Maya’s contributions to American culture and literature are