Poet Kay Ulandy Barret, “Feeds those who’ve been erased, made voiceless…”
Hannah Eko Apr 26, 2021 10:00AM ET
Photo Credit: Courtesy of Willie Lee Kinnard III, via Twitter @WillieKinardIII, Courtesy of Xandria Phillips, via Twitter @xandriaphillips, Courtesy of Xandria Phillips, via Twitter @xandriaphillips, Courtesy of Kay Ulanday Barrett, via Twitter @brownroundboi
Re-is a prefix that means “back” or “again”, a way of looking back and forward simultaneously. We reimagine, remix, and reinvent. These powerful words are the perfect accompaniment to queer poetry, which is forever filling in silences and creating new worlds. Though queerness and queer artistry have gained visibility in recent years (especially within social media channels) there are still
Poet, Raquel Gutiérrez, “Don’t be afraid to belong to each other.”
Hannah Eko Apr 12, 2021 10:00AM ET
Photo Credit: Twitter
Latinx identity is an incredible blend of movements, cultures, and language. It is also an identity that continues to face considerable challenges, including inhumane migration policies, and inaction by Congress, which continually threatens to defer the
American Dream for the undocumented Latinx community.
But despite these inequalities, still they rise. One poet on our list arrived in the US in her mother’s belly, while another challenged the notion that one must provide “proof of citizenship” to create art. And thus, we celebrate the lives and experiences of these five Latinx poets, who use their poetry as artful protest, and bridge their multitudinous identities with mastery and courageous truth-telling.