"Charif Shanahan on Making the Unseen Seen"
"But that mystery is the clarity: the experience that the poem is, cuts through the noise of the world, of our own minds, human fears and joys, our wonders and boredoms, and carries us to a moment of concentrated, distilled presence (of any affective nature—painful or otherwise), a state of being that exists outside of language, in silence, though it is language that brought us to it. That, for me, is the paradox and the gift of the lyric poem."
via LIT HUB |
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What Sparks Poetry: Laila Malik on "the organic properties of sand"
"In the petroleum economies of al Khaleej (as elsewhere), there exist micro-universes of so-called expats, a blossoming confusion of recent arrivals and longstanding, multi-generational clans, the newly affluent and then those others who live at the porous boundaries of the less desirable micro-universe of outsiders, migrant workers." |
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Write with Poetry Daily This April, to celebrate National Poetry Month, we'll share popular writing prompts from our "What Sparks Poetry" essay series each morning. Write along with us! Write a poem that is “after” a poem in another language written at least one hundred years ago. If you know the original language, do a loose translation, digressing where you want. If you don’t know the original language, look at a variety of translations, and start writing with the understanding you receive from that selection. Include an object in your poem that could only be found in the last fifty years. |
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