Showing posts with label #BlackLivesMatter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #BlackLivesMatter. Show all posts

Friday, September 18, 2015

Join Us for 3 Fabulous 100,000 Poets for Change Events featuring Mahogany L. Browne!


As part of the global celebration of poetry, art, and music's ability to promote social, environmental, and political change, Split This Rock is thrilled to join with Little Patuxent Review, Upshur Street Books, and the George Mason University Fall for the Book Festival to present three FREE events featuring Mahogany L. Browneco-founder of #BlackPoetsSpeakOut, a movement that engages Black poets and poetry in the Black Lives Matter movement. Learn more about the annual 100,000 Poets for Change celebration and other affiliated events at its website.

Photo of Mahogany Browne
Photo by Rachel Eliza Griffiths

Mahogany L. Browne bridges the gap between lyrical poets and literary emcees. Author of Smudge, she is an Urban Word NYC mentor, as seen on HBO's Brave New Voices and facilitates performance poetry and writing workshops throughout the country. Browne is also the publisher of Penmanship Books, the Nuyorican Poets Café Poetry Program Director and Friday Night Slam curator, and currently an MFA Candidate for Writing & Activism at Pratt Institute.

Get an early peek at what's in store by watching Browne perform "#blkgrlmagic" on Youtube.

JOIN US FOR THESE FREE SPECIAL EVENTS!

The Poet's Response: A Conversation on Social Justice & Poetics
Sun., Sept. 27 | 12-1pm | Baltimore Inner Harbor | FREE  
This Baltimore Book Festival panel & poetry reading features Mahogany Browne, zakia henderson-brown, Goldie Patrick, & Laura Shovan. Co-moderated by Sarah Browning (Split This Rock) and Steven Leyva (Little Patuxent Review). Visit the Baltimore Book Festival's website for more info.

Reading at Upshur Street Books 
Sun., Sept. 27 | 6pm | 827 Upshur St. NW, DC | FREE 
Join us for poetry, light refreshments, and inspiration as Mahogany Browne shares her heart-filling poetry. Visit the Facebook event page for more info.

Reading at GMU Fall for the Book Festival 
Mon., Sept. 28 | 4:30pm | GMU - Fairfax, Virginia campus, 
Sandy Spring Bank Tent, Johnson Ctr. Plaza | FREE
Don't miss Mahogany Browne at this week-long regional festival for all ages! Read more about the event and the festival at the Fall for the Book website

Friday, April 24, 2015

Poem of the Week: Ross Gay

 

A Small Needful Fact

Is that Eric Garner worked
for some time for the Parks and Rec.
Horticultural Department, which means,
perhaps, that with his very large hands,
perhaps, in all likelihood,
he put gently into the earth
some plants which, most likely,
some of them, in all likelihood,
continue to grow, continue
to do what such plants do, like house
and feed small and necessary creatures,
like being pleasant to touch and smell,
like converting sunlight
into food, like making it easier
for us to breathe.

***
Used with permission.

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Ross Gay is a gardener and teacher living in Bloomington, Indiana. His book, Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude, is available from University of Pittsburgh Press, 2015.

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Please feel free to share Split This Rock Poem of the Week widely. We just ask you to include all of the information in this post, including this request. Thanks! If you are interested in reading past poems of the week, feel free to visit the blog archive.  

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Interview with Mahogany L. Browne of Black Poets Speak Out


Finalist for the 2015 Freedom Plow Award for Poetry & Activism


The Freedom Plow Award for Poetry & Activism, sponsored by the CrossCurrents Foundation, recognizes and honors a poet who is doing innovative and transformative work at the intersection of poetry and social change. The award, judged this year by Sheila Black, Martha Collins, and E. Ethelbert Miller, is being given for the second time in 2015. 

Tickets now on sale! Join us on April 2, at the Arts Club of Washington, as we honor Mark Nowak for his work establishing "poetry dialogues" among workers around the globe.

ABOUT BLACK POETS SPEAK OUT

Jonterri Gadson, Amanda Johnston, Mahogany L. Browne
What started as a conversation between Cave Canem fellows Amanda Johnston, Mahogany L. Browne, Jonterri Gadson, and Sherina Rodriguez-Sharpe, Black Poets Speak Out (BPSO) is a poetry collective and movement that began as a hashtag video campaign housed on Tumblr, featuring hundreds of videos from Black poets reading in response to the November 24 grand jury decision not to indict Darren Wilson, the police officer who murdered Michael Brown. 

The project's purpose "is to centralize in one space hundreds of poems, songs, prayers, and testimonies speaking on behalf of black mothers, black fathers, black brothers and sisters -- thousands of voices insisting on justice. BPSO videos are a collective outcry for our black lives." 

The movement lives through several ongoing phases: 1) Black poets create and collectively house poetry videos with the mantra "I am a black poet who will not remain silent while this nation murders black people. I have a right to be angry;" 2) serve as an off-line literary protest where poets and members of the community can safely gather and share information for marching, understanding and healing; 3) tie the power of the poetic voice to civic engagement through a unique letter writing campaign, where poets and allies submit letters and poetry videos to their elected officials. The letters call for immediate action against police violence and present solutions to the President, Vice President, and Attorney General by organizers across the nation. 4) Lesson plans - available at www.poetrysociety.org.

Black Poets Speak Out uses the force of art to transform policy. 


SPLIT THIS ROCK INTERVIEWS MAHOGANY L. BROWNE

When did you first start thinking about language as a means for social change?

I began looking at my work as a tool for change in 2002 when I began working with teenage pregnant girls in group homes. Most of these young women were wards of New York State due to neglect and were initially very unimpressed with poetry. I was very aware that creative writing wouldn't save ALL of them -- but I wanted to show them a different entry into motherhood and self healing. And so my fight began.

How do you see your art as a social change agent?  

Once my students became parents that wrote poetry, college graduates that produced poetry, MFA Candidates studying poetry and authors of poetry collections -- I knew my art was not just changing my life. 

How did you as organizers and artists find each other?  

We are all Cave Canem fellows. We have an on-line forum where the question was posed by Amanda Johnston "What do we do?" -- Black Poets Speak Out was the response. 

As a collective and a movement born as a response to the November 24 grand jury decision not to indict Darren Wilson, can you discuss the roles and themes of evidence and witness throughout BPSO?

The role of BPSO has been to serve as an opportunity to gather our voices: contemporary, elders and futurists in poetic protest. This literary form of activism serves as a conduit for literature, a blueprint for survival and a salve for the community. 

How has the reality and vision of public space in our society inspired and guided your own poetry? 

I am always writing from the perspective of a mother. Because I am one. But I have been so utterly impacted by the loss of these mothers' children...I realized what a privilege -- to NOT have to consider death before graduation, before becoming a grandparent. I write now, with the pure respect and empathy for the mourning of these slain black (and brown) men and women. 

How has your work intersected with or supported the broader #BlackLivesMatter movement?

#BlackLivesMatter is a movement that allowed Black Poet Speak Out to exist. We are direct supporters of the #BlackLivesMatter campaign. As poets we are often aware of the power of activism and art. We stand in solidarity. 

Can you discuss the role social media has played in the #BlackLivesMatter and Black Poets Speak Out movement?

I can only speak about BPSO in that regard. The videos that started in Brooklyn, NY & Atlanta, GA reached the eyes and fists of poets in England & Africa. BPSO became global because of social media. The urgency became palpable. The hashtag congregated the elegies and celebration and faith in one place. This act alone informs a community of the larger body chanting "you are not alone, you are not crazy" and the platform allows educators a portal in which to borrow the tools for the younger generation. Hopefully, this intergenerational discussion articulates the cultural genocide. Hopefully, will awaken the people to demand justice. And not give in to the silence. 

How do you think social media will play into the longevity of these movements?

I think these conversations will always be accessible and of service to the people. I think social media interacts with the world when we physically cannot. 

How do you see the role of intersectionality and inter-generations in the #BlackLivesMatter and Black Poets Speak Out movement? 

Inter-generationally conversations are necessary for us to continue this work. We need young leaders -- we are mortal. And time passes too quickly. It is our duty to build the bridge so the work can continue to be done. Intersectional conversations are necessary for us to continue this work.


We need "accomplices" instead of allies. White people need to speak to their communities because it is obvious Mike Brown isn't recognized as a son. It is obvious Eric Garner is not seen as a father. And because their Black reflections aren't valued, there is a disconnect when Black people are being lynched and their murderers aren't even indicted. 

With voices from the Black Arts Movement and the Harlem Renaissance juxtaposed with contemporary black poets in #BlackPoetsSpeakOut, what do you see as the differences in poetry activism between these eras? 

I think the devastation was more imminent then. I think people were not as free to say and do as we do now -- and there was a fearlessness in that. I think today, we are celebrating celebrities more than we are celebrating the fallen. And we are only celebrating the fallen after they are gone. Which is a disservice to the testimony of black people. 

What are you most proud of as the Black Poets Speak Out movement? 

That people are finding ways within their own bodies in which protest exist. That as we continue to write and produce and stand and yell and breathe -- we are protesting injustice and the continued disregard of our humanity. 

Friday, January 23, 2015

Poem of the Week: Niki Herd

Photo by Jennie Scott 

Blessed Be

the black body            found
next door     near the house      where
the blind girl     lived

Blessed be

togetherness     the act of
intercourse or intersection      billy
club      to skull            knife
to gut              hands   noosed
around     a          neck


Blessed be       praise

Blessed be

the length        of a feather        in a church
hat       or the tension    of a chord
held in the throat           of a black girl   belting
out      amazing grace               over     a
body              now gone


Blessed be       the body now gone

Blessed be       the seasons

Blessed be       summer winter spring

Blessed be       place

Blessed be

the black body           found
in an alley      behind       that fashionable street
with those cafes         on its sleeve


Blessed be       time

Blessed be       how the moon cuts itself in half

Blessed be       the body now gone

in the time                  it takes
to place spit     to finger           to take
this page         and turn
 

***

Reprinted from The Language of Shedding Skin (Main Street Rag, 2010).
Used with permission.
Photo by Jennie Scott. 

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Niki Herd earned degrees in Creative Writing from the University of Arizona and Antioch University. Nominated twice for a Pushcart Prize, she is the recipient of fellowships from Cave Canem and the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Her work has been supported by the Astraea Foundation and the DC Commission on the Arts, and has appeared in several journals and anthologies. Her first collection of poems, The Language of Shedding Skin, was published by Main Street Rag in 2010 as part of the Editor's Select Series. She currently lives in Washington, DC. 

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Our Virtual Open Mic: Poems that Resist Police Brutality and Demand Racial Justice is now closed. These and other Black Lives Matter poems, along with Ferguson Action's list of demands, are to be read in front of the Department of Justice in the Poetry Speaks Volumes action at noon -- today -- in front the department.

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Please feel free to share Split This Rock Poem of the Week widely. We just ask you to include all of the information in this post, including this request. Thanks! If you are interested in reading past poems of the week, feel free to visit the blog archive.