Friday, April 6, 2012

Poem of the Week: Camille Dungy

Camille Dungy

Arthritis is one thing, the hurting another


.............................for Adrienne Rich in 2006



The poet's hands degenerate until her cup is too heavy.


You are not required to understand.

This is not the year for understanding.


This is the year of burning women in schoolyards

and raided homes, of tarped bodies on runways and in restaurants.


The architecture of the poet's hands has turned upon itself.


This is not the year for palliatives. It is not the year for knowing what to do.


This is the year the planet grew smaller

and no country would consent to its defeat.


The poet's cup is filled too full, a weight she cannot carry

from the table to her mouth, her lips, her tongue.

The poet's hands are congenitally spoiled.


This is not one thing standing for another.


Listen, this year three ancient cities met their ruin, maybe more,

and many profited, but this is not news for the readers here.


Should I speak indirectly?

I am not the poet. Those are not my hands.


This is the year of deportations and mothers bereaved

of all of their sons. The year of third and fourth tours,

of cutting-edge weaponry and old-fashioned guns.


Last year was no better, and this year only lays the groundwork

for the years that are to come. Listen, this is a year like no other.


This is the year the doctors struck for want of aid

and schoolchildren were sent home in the morning


and lights and gas were unreliable

and, harvesters suspect, fruit had no recourse but rot.


Many are dying for want of a cure, and the poet is patient

and her hands cause the least of her pain.


-Camille Dungy

From Smith Blue (Southern Illinois University Press, 2011)

Used by permission.



Camille T. Dungy is the author of Smith Blue and two other collections and has edited three anthologies. Her honors include the 2011 American Book Award, two Northern California Book Awards, an NEA and two NAACP Image Award nominations. She is a professor in the Creative Writing Department at San Francisco State University. www.camilledungy.com


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.


Split This Rock
www.splitthisrock.org
info@splitthisrock.org
202-787-5210

Monday, April 2, 2012

Abortion Rights Poetry Contest - Deadline Extended to April 15


Sponsored by the Abortion Care Network & Split This Rock


Deadline: April 1, 2012 - Free to enter

The Abortion Care Network (ACN), a national organization of independent providers and prochoice supporters, and Split This Rock, a national network of socially engaged poets, announce a poetry contest in conjunction with ACN’s annual meeting, to be held in May 2012 in the DC metro area.

The experience of women who seek abortion and other reproductive services is as varied as the individuals involved. For some, there is safety, relief, and good medical care. For others, there is doubt, harassment, and stigma. For all, health care takes place in a politicized context in which even the most basic choices about our bodies, sexuality, and childbearing can be scrutinized.

The ACN and Split This Rock welcome the submission of poems on these themes. We will award the following prizes: First ($100), Second ($75) and Third Place ($50), and Honorable Mention. Judging will done by Split This Rock and ACN.

The first-place winner will read the winning poem at ACN’s annual meeting in May. The prize-winning poems will be published in the ACN’s quarterly newsletter, The Provider, in the conference program distributed to all meeting attendees, and on Split This Rock’s website at www.SplitThisRock.org.

Poets from any part of the U.S. may submit poems, but we regret that no travel funds will be provided so that the winning poet may read at the meeting.

Questions? info@splitthisrock.org.

Submission Guidelines:

EXTENDED DEADLINE:

  • Submit up to 3 poems (6 pages maximum) by midnight, Sunday, April 15, 2012, in the body of a single email to: info@splitthisrock.org.
  • Attachments will not be opened. We will request Word attachments of finalist poems.
  • One entry per poet, please.
  • All styles and approaches accepted.
  • Free to enter.
  • Previously published in print is acceptable, but, please, not on the web.
  • Simultaneous submissions accepted. Please inform us at info@splitthisrock.org immediately if the poem is accepted elsewhere.
  • Poets must be able to be in the Washington, DC, area in May, 2012 to read the winning poem at the annual meeting of the ACN.
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Friday, March 30, 2012

Poem of the Week: Joel Dias-Porter

Joel Dias Porter
Photo by: Taylor Mali


TRAYVON


is a story of steam,
rising like
a swarm of hornets,
singeing sight from eyes.
a parable of lava
moldering down a mountain
igniting all green to ash,
the song of a hit recorded,
number 1 with a bullet.


Is not a story
about "fucking coons"
that "always get away."


This is not a poem
about Emmet Till,
Amadou Diallo,
or James Byrd Jr.


It is not the tale of
a "suspicious" hoodie
in the wrong neighborhood
or a trigger finger with
a "squeaky clean record."
Is not a fable of a corpse
with a bullet hole
that was tested for drugs
or a hand freshly coated
with the back flash of phosphorus
that was not.
This is a story
that checks out,
so the only charges
will be on a credit card
for funeral services.


I did not write this poem
in anger,
I did not write this poem
in "Self-Defense."
I did not write this poem.
Because my pen is empty from
having already written & written this poem.


These words can be heard
only because
while facedown
on the concrete
of the righthand lane
at 10:37 AM
on April 15th, 1987
at 19067 Greenbelt Road
my name was not Gregory Habib,
my sternum
could stand the weight
of the knee between
my shoulder blades,
and the monomaniacal eye
at the back of my head
was a .38 revolver
with a 15 lb. trigger pull
and not the 8 lb pull
of a Glock 9mm.
Because it was all just


a misunderstanding
and have a nice day, Sir.


It is not true that
my eyes are red
as a bag of Skittles
as I write this,
and if my page is dotted
with drops, it is only
Arizona iced tea that is spilled.


This poem pertains to no crime,
contains no trees
with branches strong enough
to bear the weight of a black boy,
contains no rope (of any length),
contains not even a single slipknot.


But it does loop,
like a wandering moose,
a homeward goose,
or a four hundred year old
ruse.



-Joel Dias-Porter


Used by permission.



Joel Dias-Porter (aka DJ Renegade) was born and raised in Pittsburgh, PA, and is a former professional DJ. From 1994-1999 he competed in the National Poetry Slam, and was the 1998 and 1999 Haiku Slam Champion. His poems have been published in Time Magazine, The Washington Post, Callaloo, Ploughshares, Antioch Review, Red Brick Review, Asheville Review, Beltway Quarterly and the anthologies Gathering Ground, Love Poetry Out Loud, Meow: Spoken Word from the Black Cat, Short Fuse, Role Call, Def Poetry Jam, 360 Degrees of Black Poetry, Slam (The Book), Revival: Spoken Word from Lollapallooza, Poetry Nation, Beyond the Frontier, Spoken Word Revolution, Catch a Fire, and The Black Rooster Social Inn. In 1995, he received the Furious Flower "Emerging Poet Award." Performances include the Today Show, the documentary SlamNation, on BET, and in the feature film Slam. A Cave Canem fellow and the father of a young son, He has a CD of jazz and poetry entitled 'LibationSong'.

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.


Split This Rock
www.splitthisrock.org
info@splitthisrock.org
202-787-5210

HOWL screens at each Busboys & Poets


Split This Rock Cosponsors

James Franco stars as the young Allen Ginsberg—poet, counter-culture adventurer, and chronicler of the Beat Generation. In his famously confessional, leave-nothing-out style, Ginsberg recounts the road trips, love affairs, and search for personal liberation that led to the most timeless and electrifying work of his career: the poem HOWL.

Meanwhile, in a San Francisco courtroom, HOWL is on trial. Prosecutor Ralph McIntosh (David Strathairn) sets out to prove that the book should be banned, while suave defense attorney Jake Ehrlich (Jon Hamm) argues fervently for freedom of speech and creative expression. The proceedings veer from the comically absurd to the passionate as a host of unusual witnesses (Jeff Daniels, Mary-Louise Parker, Treat Williams, Alessandro Nivola) pit generation against generation and art against fear in front of conservative Judge Clayton Horn (Bob Balaban).

HOWL is simultaneously a portrait of a renegade artist breaking down barriers to find love and redemption, and an imaginative ride through a prophetic masterpiece that rocked a generation and was heard around the world.

Composed from court records, interviews, and HOWL by Allen Ginsberg. Animation inspired by ILLUMINATED POEMS by Allen Ginsberg and Eric Drooker. http://howlthemovie.com/

About Focus-In! Films

Focus-In! Films: Cinema for a Conscious Community is a Busboys and Poets-produced monthly film series that screens films with a focus dedicated to social justice, peace, art, music, and/or community value. Films are screened one time per location with no admission cost.

Screening Dates/Times/Locations

Mon. 4/2/12 7-9pm @ Busboys and Poets - Hyattsville (MD)
Sun. 4/8/12 8-10pm @ Busboys and Poets - 14th & V (DC)
Sun. 4/15/12 7-9pm @ Busboys and Poets - Shirlington (VA)
Sun. 4/22/12 8-10pm @ Busboys and Poets - 5th & K (DC)

Facebook Event

http://www.facebook.com/events/180160762095255/

Co-sponsors

Busboys and Poets http://www.busboysandpoets.com

Oscilloscope Laboratories http://www.oscilloscope.net/

Split This Rock http://www.splitthisrock.org/

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Poem of the Week: Sonia Sanchez

With today's Poem of the Week we finish our run of 15 festival poets with Sonia Sanchez's "14 haiku" - a poem for Emmitt Till. Now, it's also a poem for Trayvon Martin and for all of the Black boys and men who have been taken from us.

Split This Rock encourages you to call on the Department of Justice to take over Trayvon's case and launch an independent investigation into the Sanford police department's unwillingness to protect Trayvon's civil rights.


Sonia Sanchez Split This Rock 2008 Opening
Sonia Sanchez at Split This Rock 2008 @Jill Brazel


14 haiku


(for Emmett Louis Till)



1.

Your limbs buried

in northern muscle carry

their own heartbeat


2.

Mississippi...

alert with

conjugated pain


3.

young Chicago

stutterer whistling

more than flesh


4.

your pores

wild stars embracing

southern eyes


5.

footprints blooming

in the night remember

your blood


6.

in this southern

classroom summer settles

into winter


7.

i hear your

pulse swallowing

neglected light


8.

your limbs

fly off the ground

little birds...


9.

we taste the

blood ritual of

southern hands


10.

blue midnite

breaths sailing on

smiling tongues


11.

say no words

time is collapsing

in the woods


12.

a mother's eyes

remembering a cradle

pray out loud


13.

walking in Mississippi

i hold the stars

between my teeth

14.

your death

a blues, i could not

drink away.


-Sonia Sanchez


Used by permission.


From Morning Haiku (Beacon Press, 2010)



Sonia Sanchez is the author of more than a dozen books of poetry, including, among others, Morning Haiku (Beacon Press, 2010) and Does your house have lions? (1995), which was nominated for both the NAACP Image and National Book Critics Circle Award. She was the first Presidential Fellow at Temple University, where she began teaching in 1977, and held the Laura Carnell Chair in English there until her retirement in 1999. She is the first Poet Laureate of Philadelphia.


Sanchez will be reading at Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness, March 22-25, 2012. The festival is SOLD OUT. Join us for a poetry action at the Supreme Court Friday March 23. Details here.


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.


Split This Rock
www.splitthisrock.org
info@splitthisrock.org
202-787-5210

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

No Matter What: A Review of Rachel McKibbens’ Pink Elephant

The following review was written by guest reviewer Bob Blair.

Say it clearly and you make it beautiful, no matter what. – Bruce Weigl, “The Impossible”

The 46 poems in Rachel McKibbens’ first book, Pink Elephant, validate Weigl’s claim for the power of clarity. A memoir in verse, a mosaic of savage vignettes from her nightmare childhood through the challenges of motherhood, these poems recount and reflect on the violence and desperation of McKibbens’ early years – their enduring effects, and her struggle to overcome that history.

The book’s title, which recalls the comfort of a child’s stuffed toy, gives no hint of what’s ahead. The first clue comes in the dedication:

for my brother, who lived

for my father, who learned

Both men feature prominently in the first half of the book – which addresses McKibben’s often terrifying childhood. Peter, the Hansel to McKibbens’ Gretel, first appears in the book’s opening poem:

I love my brother. He had the exact same childhood as I did.

But he doesn’t get the credit for it. He isn’t the writer. I am

the star of the violence. I expose. My Peter, when he marries,

I will be so sad. No girl in the world deserves him but me. (I Forget Who I Said It To…)

Peter was her comrade in the trenches of their family warfare, and, at times, took the brunt of their father’s rages for her. But he was also the child – the son – their mother favored. So, resentment and anger coexist with the solidarity.

The morning I caught my brother behind the couch,

my pet hamster in his hands, holding her

steady as a bowl of blood, a new heat

moved through me, tightened itself

around my throat like a leash.

I smacked his face and bit his shoulder.

He dropped the hamster to the floor. An Easter present

from my father. Mine. I grabbed her

and held her up to his face,

squeezed until she went limp beneath the crush. (For Du’a Khalil)

Jealousy, rage and violence echo throughout Pink Elephant – background music to a family saga in which alcoholism, assaults, and psychological abuse are recurring motifs. As McKibbens’ story develops poem by poem, we see her struggling against her father’s brutal rages and her mother’s crushing indifference.

Because Pink Elephant is essentially a memoir, it helps to read the poems in the order in which McKibbens presents them. There are links among the poems and sequences embedded in the overall arc of the book. For example, Parts 1 and 2 include “The First Time” (she ran away from home with her brother), “The Day After the First Time We Ran Away from Home,” “The Second Time” (she ran away with her step mother), and “The Last Time.” The sequence begins with the futility of escape --

It’s funny to me now, picturing

two children running away

as unprepared as a fed up housewife –

where did we imagine we could go?

What new home would drop from the sky for us?

Which saint would dare burst from its plaster

shell to scoop us from our ugly lives? (The First Time)

-- and concludes with her confrontation with the abusive father she had been trying to flee. Having taken a hammer from his tool chest, she sneaks up to his bedroom --

I turned the knob slowly,

stood over my father’s body,

his chest heaving, then sinking

when his tongue rattled, then stopped,

and the whites of his eyes

rolled over, and he stared

only at the weapon in my hand

and I looked at him and said,

If you ever touch us again,

I will kill you.

And then he saw me.

Okay, he said.

Okay. (The Last Time)

The poems in the second half of the book deal with McKibbens’ men and her reflections on raising her own children. We also see more of her mother here, but mainly as the woman her daughter sought desperately, but hopelessly, to please -- an anti-model of parenthood. In McKibbens’ eyes her mother saw her as “a filthy little hitchhiker you never meant to pick up,/ a greedy little fetus. An accident waiting to happen.” In “The Pacifier,” she describes breast-feeding one of her own children and reflects on the taunting that accompanied her mother’s breast-feedings.

Father told me how she would tease,

rubbing her nipple across my lip

until my head whipped toward it

how she’d pull back and laugh

as I wagged my empty mouth,

rooting for her tough, sweet skin.

This is how I learned the difference

between women and mothers.

That is when I knew

what I wanted to be. (The Pacifier)

Not a few of the experiences described in Pink Elephant are deeply troubling. In “Tomboy,” a poem about how McKibbens absorbed her father’s anger and misogyny, the young girl smuggles an imaginary mermaid home from a beach trip:

I begged her to teach me the love in women,

to help me seem less unnatural.

But her words rippled in her throat –

a wild ocean language I could not comprehend.

Give me something, I warned, or I’ll dry you out.

She began to writhe beneath my voice

as I spit words that slurred her flesh.

It was my own wild language, passed down

to me by my father: words, sounds, rages,

the darkest blue shades of misogyny

no child’s mouth should ever dare commit. (Tomboy)

The child’s frustration and anger quickly turn to violence, and she attacks the captive mermaid she decries as “full of woman’s ungratefulness.”

The next morning I packed her throat full of sand.

Stuffed her gills with mud and broken seashells.

She lacked all strength to squirm and simply

looked at me in horror

watching me return to the only child I knew how to be –

I was mythological and frightening.

I was half man,

I was half flawless. (Tomboy)

“Tomboy” is both psychologically insightful and richly imaginative, but some readers likely will recoil at its graphic violence – and it is far from the most violent of Pink Elephant’s poems.

Still, psychologists have noted that humans tend to give greater attention and psychological weight to negative experiences, threats over opportunities, and bad news over good. That theory may – along with the thoughtful craft that went into the making and interweaving of Pink Elephant’s poems – help explain the power and appeal of the book’s sustained and intimate narrative.

Given the grim childhood she describes, it is affirming to read how McKibbens reacts against her own history in raising her children, declaring: “My children are all five of my hearts, unleashed.” (A Sunday Cross-Examination of My Future Next Husband)

Pink Elephant offers a poetry of pain, survival and, ultimately, self-affirmation. Its stories are told unflinchingly, but with touches of sharp, dark humor. The book’s Hansel and Gretel overtones, symbolic mermaids, surreal dream scenes and spare but graphic descriptions of physical and emotional brutality often give the stories a quasi-mythological feel – and the atmosphere of a gothic horror tale.

The epigraph by Bruce Weigl at the beginning of this review is the final line of a poem about being molested at age seven. It asserts that however ugly and painful one’s experiences, recounting them with unblinking clarity can give rise to an unexpected beauty. Pink Elephant offers readers just that sort of beauty.

Rachel McKibbens is the mother of five children. A self-described ex-punk rock chola, she is the 2009 Women of the World poetry slam champion, an eight-time National Poetry Slam team member, a three-time NPS finalist, and a 2007 New York Foundation for the Arts poetry fellow and Pushcart nominee. For four years, she co-curated the louderARTS Project reading series in New York City, coaching their slam team to three consecutive National Poetry Slam final stages. She teaches poetry and creative writing at diverse venues, from housing projects to hospitals, high schools and universities.

Bob Blair facilitates a weekly poetry workshop at Miriam’s Kitchen (www.miriamskitchen.org) in Washington, D.C.

Rachel McKibbens

Pink Elephant

Cypher Books

$12.95

Monday, March 19, 2012

I bite shut my eyes between songs: Review of Sherwin Bitsui's Flood Song

Flood Song by Sherwin Bitsui

Reviewed by Melissa Tuckey

Sherwin Bitsui is a member of the Dine tribe of the Todich’ii’nii (Bitter Water Clan), born for the Tl’izilani (Many Goats Clan), who grew up on the Navajo reservation in White Cone, Arizona. Flood Song is his second book of poems. Bitsui writes in English, and also speaks Dine, so that the poems navigate between Dine culture and industrial/ American culture.

In a recent interview, describing how the book moves between these experiences, Bitsui says:

Politically, English is the language of my tribal nation’s oppressor, but we certainly have to use it to come into a new kind of knowing that will help us translate this outer culture into our own and vice versa. Flood Song feels like it’s trying to braid these diverging worldviews together in order to create a middle area that is accessible to both perspectives.

Flood Song is a poem in which images such as “I cover my eyes with electrical wires,/see yellow dawn eclipse Stop signs” co-exist with “grandfather’s accent rippling/ around the stone flung into his thinning mattress,” the grandfather who “Years before, he would have named this season/ by flattening a field where grasshoppers jumped into black smoke.”

Flood Song is both a vision and an utterance, from the first line of the poem, “I bite shut my eyes between songs.” We are drawn by the vividness of image and its strangeness. The speaker has a world to make, one that crosses between cultures. The singer’s “shrill cry.... becomes the wailing that returns to the reservation.” As readers we are participants in this ritual, we follow the singer “across sand dunes/ warm his hand with your breath.”

This sense of braiding or bringing together of disparate worldviews is present at the very level of sentence-making in the book. Entering the poems, we are entering a world. Sentences like “bison horns twist into the sides of trains/ winding through the broth filled eyes of hens/ squawking from the icebox./ shock-coils from the jet engine’s roar/ erupt from memory of splintered eagle bone” render a world where past, present and future are simultaneously present and time is luminous. The natural world here is violently displaced, but continues to exist in the memory of an eagle bone, and as song.

As Americans – especially those of us who are white – we often do not live with our history. We live in the present tense and even that is not fast or new enough. These poems contain history and vision, as well as the shocking pace of the new, even while they bend toward beauty.

At its most surreal, the poem is birthing a new world: “The storm lying outside its fetal shell/folds back its antelope ears.” Bitsui writes, “I wanted to crack open bulldozers and spray their yolk over the hills so that a new/ birth cry would awaken the people who had fallen asleep.”

I especially enjoy the sense that experimentation is not for its own sake, but that there is something pressing within this book to born, to be remembered, to be told.