What Sparks Poetry: Readers Write Back
"I love this poem because when I read it, I feel the teenage girl inside me rise up and wave hello. The teenage girl inside me wants to tell the cute boys what to do and she wants them to love her madly. My inner teenage girl sends poems to boys and says, “See, see?” She is testing to see if a boy is a good person, if he will protect her, if men protect women anymore. No matter our age, we want boys and men to honor our sacredness, but so many seem lost in time." Jana Rose |
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Cave Canem: The Centrifugal Force in American Literature
Founders Toi Derricotte and Cornelius Eady organized the first Cave Canem retreat in 1996. "Named after a sign in Latin that Derricotte had seen while visiting the House of the Tragic Poet in Pompeii, Cave Canem ('Beware of the Dog') was envisioned as a community-building enterprise. There, Black poets of all stripes could tune out the world and instead fine-tune their craft. Eady and Derricotte knew finding institutional support for such a project would be difficult if not impossible. And so, in a fit of brilliant folly, they decided to take it on themselves—financially and logistically."
viaLOS ANGELES TIMES |
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