Showing posts with label Natalie Diaz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Natalie Diaz. Show all posts

Monday, January 12, 2015

Announcing the 2015 Split This Rock Annual Poetry Contest Winning Poems


Each year, Split This Rock sponsors a national poetry contest, which serves to raise the visibility and prestige of poetry of provocation and witness. Winning poems are published on Split This Rock's website and their authors receive free registration to Split This Rock's biennial festival. Additionally, the 1st-place winner reads the winning poem on the mainstage at the festival. This year, honorable mentions also receive a signed copy of Nude Descending an Empire, Sam Taylor’s newest book.

We're grateful to the contest judge, Natalie Diaz, and to all who entered poems in this, our 8th annual contest. The poems were all brave and necessary and poets' voices are more essential than ever. Thank you.

The 2015 Contest Judge






















Natalie Diaz grew up in the Fort Mojave Indian Village in Needles, California, on the banks of the Colorado River. She is Mojave and an enrolled member of the Gila River Indian Community. After playing professional basketball in Europe and Asia for several years, she completed her MFA in poetry and fiction at Old Dominion University. She was awarded the Bread Loaf 2012 Louis Untermeyer Scholarship in Poetry, the 2012 Native Arts and Cultures Foundation Literature Fellowship, a 2012 Lannan Residency, as well as being awarded a 2012 Lannan Literary Fellowship. She won a Pushcart Prize in 2013. Her first book, When My Brother Was an Aztec, was published in June 2012, by Copper Canyon Press. She currently lives in Mohave Valley, Arizona, and directs a language revitalization program at Fort Mojave, her home reservation. There she works and teaches with the last Elder speakers of the Mojave language.

Judge's Comments


It was a lucky thing for me to judge this year’s contest. First, I enjoyed reading the poems and hearing the brave voices of the poets who built them. Second, I admire the unflinching work of Split This Rock and Sarah Browning and Company.

What I admired about the poem, “Letter From the Water at Guantanamo Bay” is the poet’s choice to continue looking at something that some of us have already begun looking away from—by that, I mean that often we stay away from subjects that “have already been written about,” or subjects that have already dominated the medial and social consciousness in a way that makes us feel they are clichéd. However, we cannot write enough about some of these painful cogs in the machineries of our worlds both past and present. Guantanamo Bay is one of those cogs, a great turner of shame and savagery. In this poem, the water becomes new, becomes more than water, becomes both the weapon and the judge, the deliverer of cruelty but also the only entity capable of compassion. The water becomes the thing we are both afraid of and aspiring to be, as the water says in this letter: Strange, isn't it? To be 58% a thing and yet recoil when you hear its rush—

The Selected Poems


First Prize: "Letter From the Water at Guantanamo Bay" by Sara Brickman, Seattle, WA.
Sara receives $500, free festival registration, and an invitation to read the winning poem at Split This Rock Poetry Festival in April 2016.

Second Prize: "Being Called a Faggot While Walking the Road to Clemson, South Carolina" by D. Gilson, Washington, D.C.
D. Gilson receives $250 and free registration at the April 2016 Split This Rock Poetry Festival. 

Third Prize: "A Wet Daydream" by Nadia Sheikh, Tallahassee, FL. 
Nadia receieves $250 and free registration at the April 2016 Split This Rock Poetry Festival.

Honorable Mention: "First Light" by Chen Chen, Syracuse, NY. 
Chen receives a signed copy of Sam Taylor's book, Nude Descending an Empire.


FIRST PRIZE


Letter From the Water at Guantanamo Bay
-- Sara Brickman


They do not want me to be a river, but I am unstoppable.
                 I am the perfect instrument. Capable

of every sound, but here the only sound you hear under
                                         me is No. Is, Please. The men

in uniforms strap them to the wood
                 and call it water-

boarding, like drowning is an amusing summer sport.
                                         They hood them into darkness, and tilt their heads

back, pour me up nose and throat until they can't breathe without sucking
                 me in. Inside the prisoners' lungs, I see only panic,

and mothers. The men in uniforms say they do this
                                         to get   “the information.”

I do not know what this   “getting”
                 means. I only know swallow

and crush
                                         undertow and rip-

tide. I have been
                 the moon's wife, but here I taste of mold

and rust.
                                         They line me up

with their scalpels, their chains,
                 their American pop music

played all night
                                         to drive the men crazy, to get    the information

I do not know what desperation
                 feels like

but I imagine it is why the water in these men
                                         crawls out of their eyes to say hello

                 Hello.

Strange, isn't it? To be 58% a thing and yet
                 recoil             when you hear its rush—
Don't you know this? Silly human
                                         with a dog-tag hanging round your neck,

that you are made of me? Connected
                 to all the humid rot in this dungeon air—

how you make a puppet of the current
                                         in you, soldier.

How fast you make an ocean into a gutter
                filled with blood and shit—

looking for answers? Like you could find an oracle
                                         in more death

you drainers
               of the heart. I made you.

Do you think the first creature crawled out of me
                                         to invent                                       torture?


I understand why you do this.
                                         I know what it is
               to close your eyes and see only the thousands of dead

someone has laid at your doorstep. You have filled me
                                         with shipwreck and slave-hold but still

you holler bold
               with your proud, American heart and I wish

                           I could stop flowing in you.

Wish I could return to the clouds,
               to kiss the lightning with my wet throat

but I am locked in your muscle
                          as you beat each man
                                         for praying in a language that looks

like waves. I have
               one muscle,
                          and it wraps around the entire earth.

It is a vengeful storm
               and I have learned from you how to cleave
                          waves from the marrow

how to lick clean.

(Photo by: Samuel Eli Smith)

Sara Brickman is an author, performer, and activist from Ann Arbor, MI. The 2014 Ken Warfel Fellow for Poetry in Community, Sara is the winner of the 2014 Split This Rock Abortion Rights Poetry contest, the recipient of a grant from 4Culture, and an Artist Trust EDGE fellow. Her work has been published or is forthcoming in Bestiary, Hoarse, The New, Alight, and the anthology Courage: Daring Poems for Gutsy Girls. A teacher with Writers in the Schools, three-time member of the Seattle Poetry Slam Team, and the 2013 Rain City Women of the World Slam Champion, Sara has performed her work at venues across North America. She is the founder and curator of the living-room reading series The Hootenanny, which showcases groundbreaking writers and performers. She lives and writes in Seattle, WA.



SECOND PRIZE


Being Called a Faggot While Walking the Road to Clemson, South Carolina
-- D. Gilson

The honeysuckle dew slick
& sweet this morning

& only an empty Wendy's cup
thrown to ditch

& the truck passing
(& it is almost always

a truck) slows just
to roll down

the window & O
I wish they could smell

this & O I wish
I could quit

them driving
so fast & missing

this honeysuckle, so dew-
sweet this morning.


D. Gilson is the author of Crush (Punctum Books, 2014), with Will Stockton; Brit Lit (Sibling Rivalry, 2013); Catch & Release (2012), winner of the Robin Becker Prize; and a forthcoming essay collection, Learning to Poem (Sibling Rivalry, 2015). He is a PhD candidate in American literature and cultural studies at The George Washington University, and his work has appeared or is forthcoming in PANK, The Indiana Review, and The Rumpus. Find D. at dgilson.com.


THIRD PRIZE


A Wet Daydream
-- Nadia Sheikh

I let Shane Kennedy
reach back in his desk
to fondle my calf,
soft and buttery
after the first shave,
hoping he wouldn’t say
Moslem again, wouldn't
ask, So your dad’s
a professional terrorist?
            I wish
I’d unstitched the seams
of my skort, lured him
into a bathroom stall,
bit his lip ‘til he bled
and had torn my shirt off—
a ticking bomb strapped
to my training bra—
and let him lick me,
made him swallow.


Nadia Sheikh is a first-year MFA student at Florida State University, a rhyme enthusiast, a waffle connoisseur, a human.


Tuesday, July 8, 2014

2015 Poetry Contest

Announcing the 8th Annual 
Split This Rock  
Poetry Contest  

Judged by: Natalie Diaz
Natalie Diaz  


Benefits Split This Rock Poetry Festival
April 14-17, 2016
$1,000 Awarded for poems of provocation & witness

DEADLINE: NOVEMBER 1, 2014

Prizes: First place $500; 2nd and 3rd place, $250 each. 

Winning poems will be published on www.SplitThisRock.org; winners will receive free festival registration; and the 1st-place winner will be invited to read winning poem at Split This Rock Poetry Festival, 2016.


Up to three honorable mentions will receive signed copies of Nude Descending an Empire, Sam Taylor’s newest book. Split This Rock Executive Director Sarah Browning has this to say of the book: "Sam Taylor’s poems make me shudder at the horror and pleasure of this world. In the face of the American imperial project, the poems sing every song imaginable – dirge, praise song, ecstatic chant. The antidote to despair, then, is more – more of the body, heart, more mystery, fear. 'Don’t say impossible,' says the poet, and these hurting, gorgeous poems never do."



Deadline: November 1, 2014

Reading Fee: $20, which supports Split This Rock Poetry Festival 2016. 

Details: Submissions should be in the spirit of Split This Rock: socially engaged poems, poems that reach beyond the self to connect with the larger community or world; poems of provocation and witness. This theme can be interpreted broadly and may include but is not limited to work addressing politics, economics, government, war, leadership; issues of identity (gender, sexuality, race, ethnicity, disability, body image, immigration, heritage, etc.); community, civic engagement, education, activism; and poems about history, Americana, cultural icons.

Split This Rock subscribes to the Council of Literary Magazines and Presses Contest Code of Ethics. Read it online here.

Submission guidelines:

Submit up to 3 unpublished poems, no more than 6 pages total, in any style, in the spirit of Split This Rock (see above). Please do not put your name or contact information on the poems themselves, only your cover page.



Simultaneous submissions OK, but please notify us immediately if the poem is accepted elsewhere.

Please contact us directly if you are unable to access Submittable at info@splitthisrock.org. 

For more information:   

Saturday, January 25, 2014

Split This Rock Goes to Seattle!

Join Split This Rock at AWP in Seattle
  
February 27-March 1, 2014
Table BB38
2 Conference Presentations
  
Splitistas Katy Richey & Jonathan B. Tucker sporting their 2012 festival T shirts at AWP 2013

We hope to see many friends at the annual conference of the Association of Writers & Writing Programs (AWP), February 27-March 1, in Seattle.


Split This Rock will be at Table BB38 in the bookfair with haiku post cards to president Obama and a drawing for a free festival registration.

We'll also be presenting two official conference programs: A 2014 festival preview reading with Natalie DiazDanez SmithPatricia Smithand Wang Ping on Saturday at noon and an interactive workshop on Thursday at 1:30 pm on "Engaging Youth with Slam Poetry and Spoken Word," with Elizabeth Acevedo, Josh Healey, Pages Matam,  and Jonathan Tucker


Read on for more details. Poetry is everywhere!


Visit us at Table BB38

Splitistas -- like the two friendly and brilliant ones pictured above -- will be on hand to meet you and tell you more about our efforts to bring poetry to the center of public life - where it belongs! Stop by to write a Haiku Post Card to President Obama and to enter a drawing for a free registration to Split This Rock Poetry Festival 2014.

Two Split This Rock Conference Presentations

Intense/Beautiful/Devoted: 
Poems of Provocation & Witness
Saturday, March 1, noon-1:15 pm
Room 301, Western New England MFA Annex, Level 3

Sarah Browning, Natalie Diaz, Danez Smith, Patricia Smith, Wang Ping

Leonard Bernstein wrote, "This will be our reply to violence: to make music more intensely, more beautifully, more devotedly than ever before." Poets today are looking without flinching at our world of drones, evictions, gun shows, and violence to the earth, as they tell the many stories of our lives. Happily, too, they are imagining alternatives and provoking change. A reading of intense and striking music, in the spirit of Split This Rock, with Patricia Smith providing opening remarks.

Engaging Youth with Slam Poetry and Spoken Word
Thursday, February 27, 1:30-2:45 pm
Room 604, Washington State Convention Center, Level 6

Pages Matam, Jonathan Tucker, Josh Healey, Elizabeth Acevedo

As performance poetry and slam competition grows in popularity, many organizations are using the energetic and entertaining format of slam to engage, inspire, and motivate young students. In this interactive workshop, leading youth workers will discuss the benefits and challenges of slam poetry programs and facilitate dialogue among participants about best practices and how to reach and motivate more students using poetry. 

The full conference program and schedule are here.

Friday, January 3, 2014

Poem of the Week: Natalie Diaz


       


Why I Don't Mention Flowers When Conversations with My Brother Reach Uncomfortable Silences

Forgive me, distant wars, for bringing
                              flowers home.

--Wislawa Szymborska



In the Kashmir mountains,
my brother shot many men,
blew skulls from brown skins,
dyed white desert sand crimson.

What is there to say to a man
who has traversed such a world,
whose hands and eyes have
betrayed him?

Were there flowers there? I asked.

This is what he told me:

In a village, many men
wrapped a woman in a sheet.
She didn't struggle.
Her bare feet dragged in the dirt.

They laid her in the road
and stoned her.

The first man was her father.
He threw two stones in a row.
Her brother had filled his pockets
with stones on the way there.

The crowd was a hive
of disturbed bees. The volley
of stones against her body
drowned out her moans.

Blood burst through the sheet
like a patch of violets,
a hundred roses in bloom.


-Natalie Diaz
  
Used by permission.

From When My Brother Was an Aztec (Copper Canyon Press, 2012)  

Natalie Diaz grew up in the Fort Mojave Indian Village in Needles, California, on the banks of the Colorado River. She is Mojave and an enrolled member of the Gila River Indian Community. After playing professional basketball in Europe and Asia for several years, she completed her MFA in poetry and fiction at Old Dominion University. She was awarded the Bread Loaf 2012 Louis Untermeyer Scholarship in Poetry, the 2012 Native Arts and Cultures Foundation Literature Fellowship, a 2012 Lannan Residency, as well as being awarded a 2012 Lannan Literary Fellowship. She won a Pushcart Prize in 2013. Her first book, When My Brother Was an Aztec, was published in 2012 by Copper Canyon Press. She lives in Mohave Valley, AZ, and directs a language revitalization program at Fort Mojave, her home reservation. There she works and teaches with the last Elder speakers of the Mojave language.

Please feel free to forward Split This Rock Poem of the Week widely. We just ask you to include all of the information in this email, including this request. Thanks!

If you are interested in reading past poems of the week, feel free to visit the blog archive.