poet

Poetry To UK Precedent: What Went Into Landmark 'Bulldozer Justice' Verdict

In a landmark judgment yesterday, the Supreme Court demolished the idea of 'bulldozer justice' that several state governments had unleashed against accused in heinous criminal cases.




poet

Poetry To UK Precedent: What Went Into Landmark 'Bulldozer Justice' Verdict

In a landmark judgment yesterday, the Supreme Court demolished the idea of 'bulldozer justice' that several state governments had unleashed against accused in heinous criminal cases.






poet

Gayatri Asokan’s new ghazal draws on poet Jaun Elia’s work

Seven years after transitioning from Malayalam playback to the world of ghazals, Gayatri Asokan is set to release yet another track, ‘Kitne Aish Se Rahte Honge’, inspired by the poetry of Jaun Elia




poet

North, SC Author Publishes Poetry Collection

Grief Can Be Difficult To Go Through But You Don't Have To Be Alone




poet

Sault Ste. Marie, MI Author Publishes Poetry Collection

A Journey Of Self Discovery Told In Verse.




poet

Newburgh, IN Author Publishes Poetry Collection

How Beautiful Can This World Become When Snow Starts To Fall




poet

Rochester, MN Author Publishes Poetry Collection

Life Is Something We All Go Through And Humanity Is Something We All Have.




poet

Slingerlands, NY Author Publishes Poetry Collection

We Can Look To Nature To See Similarities To Humanity.




poet

Covington, LA Author Publishes Spiritual Poetry

Verse Told Through The Eyes Of A Man And His Faith




poet

Aug 28, ARABIC PHOENIX POETRY! Arabic Poetry Web Page to Read & order the Phoenix!

ARABIC PHOENIX POETRY web page for Arabic reading and ordering "Rising of the Phoenix" selected poetry collection in four formats, audio book, e-book, pics iBook & hardcover book.




poet

Poetry and Liturgy and Holy Week

As we move close to glorious Pascha, Angela takes a few moments to reflect on the common threads between Poetry, Liturgy, and Holy Week.




poet

Poetry and Liturgy

In troubled times, some people turn to binge watching television shows, some to food, some to drink. Angela turns to poetry. In this episode we explore how poetry and Liturgy intersect because in a technology laden, short attention, sound bite driven world we are often unaware of the deep poetry and lasting peace that Liturgy offers.




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Why Christians Must Acquire the Soul of a Poet

St. Porphyrios wrote, “Whoever wants to become a Christian must first become a poet.” Most of us are not poets so does this preclude us from being true Christians? Join Michael as he explores God’s poetic and artistic nature and how to understand and connect to Him through the divine language of symbol, beauty, and our own personal artistry even while living in a culture dominated by utilitarianism and reductionism.




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Episode 155: Amanda Gorman's Poetry

The girls discuss the poetry of Amanda Gorman, the young poet who read her work at the inauguration and Super Bowl. They discuss themes of light and darkness, the way burdens can be inherited, and a vision of God's Kingdom.




poet

Mary Weston Fordham Poetry

Dr. John Mark Reynolds talks about poet Mary Weston Fordham and reads one of her poems.




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The Delicate Poetry of Orthodoxy

Dr. Albert Rossi reflects on the mystery of the relationship that the Orthodox Church has with the Theotokos through the poetic expressions that the Church uses to describe her.




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The Theological Poetry of St. Gregory the Theologian

Reflections on the poems of St Gregory of Nazianzus, including his poems for morning and evening, of sin and of redemption; with a comparison to the hopeful proclamation of the funeral songs of the Church.




poet

Meet the 'busking poet' who writes on demand

Law student Joel Wilson and his typewriter are becoming a popular sight in York city centre.




poet

Bobby Womack - The Poet

Womack updates his material for the 80s, creating grown-up sensual soul.




poet

Wilderness Poets Freeze-Dried Açai Powder

The Açai Powder the newest addition to the company's line of USDA Organic Superfood Powders which includes: Dragon Fruit, Camu Camu Berry, Elderberry, Blue Butterfly Pea Flower, Turmeric, Super Green Juice, Ceremonial Matcha Green Tea, Premium Grade Organic Matcha Green Tea, Hemp Protein, Coconut Milk and Coconut Water.




poet

The Bookshelf: Miriam Levine's Poetry of 'Loss and Consolation'

Miriam Levine's new collection of poetry is, as she describes it, a book about loss and consolation. In Saving Daylight, poems recall small moments: a chance meeting outside a theater, an encounter with a mosquito, watching a harmless spider walk across someone's hair. Levine lives in Concord for part of the year, and she sat down with NHPR's All Things Considered Host Peter Biello to chat about her new collection.




poet

The Bookshelf: Poet Marie Harris and 'Desire Lines'

If you've ever been on a college campus or a public park, you may have seen desire lines. Those are those well-worn paths carved by travelers who, for whatever reason, preferred a route that diverged from the ones carefully cured in concrete by city or campus planners.




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The Bookshelf: N.H. Poet Laureate Will Be Your Reader

Alexandria Peary is New Hampshire’s new poet laureate, and she’s ramping up her work as the state’s official advocate for poetry and the literary arts more broadly. As part of her work as poet laureate, she’s been reading work sent to her by New Hampshire poets.




poet

Nobel Literature Prize Goes to S. Korean Han Kang for "Intense Poetic Prose"

[Culture] :
Anchor: South Korean author Han Kang has won the 2024 Nobel Prize in Literature. The Swedish Academy made the announcement Thursday, and Han became the second South Korean ever to win a Nobel Prize and the first to attain the honor in literature. Kim Bum-soo has more.   Report: South Korean writer Han ...

[more...]




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'Not Broken But Simply Unfinished': Poet Amanda Gorman Calls For A Better America

Poet Amanda Gorman speaks at the inauguration of U.S. President Biden on the West Front of the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.; Credit: Alex Wong/Getty Images

Camila Domonoske | NPR

When Amanda Gorman, a 22-year-old poet from Los Angeles, took to the stage on Wednesday, it was immediately clear why the new president had chosen her as his inaugural poet.

Gorman echoed, in dynamic and propulsive verse, the same themes that Biden has returned to again and again and that he wove throughout his inaugural address: unity, healing, grief and hope, the painful history of American experience and the redemptive power of American ideals.

Where Biden said, "We must end this uncivil war," Gorman declared, "We lay down our arms so we can reach out our arms to one another."

And where Biden called for an American story of "love and healing" and "greatness and goodness," Gorman saw strength in pain: "Even as we grieved, we grew," she said.

Gorman opened by acknowledging the reasons why hope can be challenging. "Where can we find light in this never-ending shade?" she asked.

But she continued: "And yet, the dawn is ours before we knew it. Somehow we do it. Somehow we weathered and witnessed a nation that isn't broken but simply unfinished."

She acknowledged the power of her own presence on the stage in "a country and a time where a skinny black girl descended from slaves and raised by a single mother can dream of becoming president, only to find herself reciting for one."

Like Obama inaugural poet Richard Blanco, who invoked the grand sweep of American geography in a call for unity in "One Today," Gorman dedicated a portion to "every corner called our country" from the South to the Midwest. She ended with an invitation to "step out of the shade."

"The new dawn blooms as we free it," she said. "For there is always light, if only we are brave enough to see it – if only we are brave enough to be it."

Gorman was following in the footsteps of poets like Blanco, Robert Frost and Maya Angelou as she composed the poem "The Hill We Climb" for the inauguration.

She also took her cues from orators like Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King, Jr. — people who knew a thing or two about calling for hope and unity in times of despair and division.

Gorman told NPR she dug into the works of those speakers (and Winston Churchill, too) to study up on ways "rhetoric has been used for good." Over the past few weeks, she composed a poem that acknowledges the previous president's incitement of violence, but turns toward hope.

"The Hill We Climb" reads, in part:

We've seen a force that would shatter our nation rather than share it,

Would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy.

And this effort very nearly succeeded.

But while democracy can be periodically delayed,

It can never be permanently defeated.

In this truth, in this faith, we trust.

For while we have our eyes on the future,

history has its eyes on us.

Gorman, like Biden, had a speech impediment as a child. (Biden had a stutter; Gorman had difficulty pronouncing certain sounds.) She told NPR's Steve Inskeep that her speech impediment was one reason she was drawn to poetry at a young age.

"Having an arena in which I could express my thoughts freely was just so liberating that I fell head over heels, you know, when I was barely a toddler," she said.

For Gorman, a former National Youth Poet Laureate, her struggle to speak provided a connection not only to the incoming president, but also to previous inaugural poets, too.

"Maya Angelou was mute growing up as a child and she grew up to deliver the inaugural poem for President Bill Clinton," she says. "So I think there is a real history of orators who have had to struggle with a type of imposed voicelessness, you know, having that stage in the inauguration."

Barack Obama, Bill Clinton and John F. Kennedy were the only presidents in the past who chose to have poems read at their inaugurations. You can read all the previous poems here.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org.




poet

Poetry Challenge: Create A List Poem That Grapples With Rise Of Anti-Asian Racism

; Credit: /Katherine Du

Casey Noenickx | NPR

Over the years, NPR's poetry community has turned both painful and joyful experiences into magnificent work.

As the world still endures the coronavirus pandemic, the U.S. also grieves over increased violence against Asian Americans and a mass shooting in Georgia that left six women of Asian descent dead.

"Let's be clear: Anti-Asian violence and discrimination are not new. But, this racism seems to be heightened," says Kwame Alexander, NPR's resident poet. "And the onus is not on Asian Americans to figure this out. Frankly, it's on white people, it's on the rest of us — individually, systemically, to talk about it, to pay attention to, advocate against it."

"Between Autumn Equinox and Winter Solstice, Today," by Emily Jungmin Yoon, is a list poem that reflects the coldness of the world and how it wears on us. Yoon is a South Korean-born poet pursuing her Ph.D. in Korean literature at the University of Chicago.

Alexander and Morning Edition's Rachel Martin ask listeners: How do you cope with recent anti-Asian violence and discrimination? Tell us in a list poem.

Your poem doesn't have to rhyme. It just needs to have an ordered list with details that show your state of mind — and must begin with the word "today."

Share your poem through the form below. Then Alexander will take lines from some of your pieces and create a community crowdsourced poem. Alexander and Martin will read it on air, and NPR will publish it online, where contributors will be credited.

Submissions are due by noon ET on Monday, April 5.


Here are the terms of the callout:

By providing your Submission to us, you agree that you have read, understand and accept the following terms in relation to the content and information (your "Submission") you are providing to National Public Radio ("NPR," "us" or "our"):

You are submitting content pursuant to a callout by Morning Edition related to a segment with Kwame Alexander wherein he creates unique poetry based on listener submissions. You understand that you are submitting content for the purpose of having Kwame use that content to create a new poem or poems ("Poem") with the material you submit. You must be over the age of 18 to submit material.

You will retain copyright in your Submission, but agree that NPR and/or Kwame Alexander may edit, modify, use, excerpt, publish, adapt or otherwise make derivative works from your Submission and use your Submission or derivative works in whole or in part in any media or format and/or use the Submission or Poem for journalistic and/or promotional purposes generally, and may allow others to do so. You understand that the Poem created by Kwame Alexander will be a new creative work and may be distributed through NPR's programs (or other media), and the Poem and programs can be separately subject to copyright protection. Your Submission does not plagiarize or otherwise infringe any third-party copyright, moral rights or any other intellectual property rights or similar rights. You have not copied any part of your Submission from another source. If your Submission is selected for inclusion in the Poem, you will be acknowledged in a list of contributors on NPR's website or otherwise receive appropriate credit, but failure to do so shall not be deemed a breach of your rights.

Your submission will be governed by our general Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. As the Privacy Policy says, we want you to be aware that there may be circumstances in which the exemptions provided under law for journalistic activities or freedom of expression may override privacy rights you might otherwise have.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

This content is from Southern California Public Radio. View the original story at SCPR.org.




poet

"Bdóte" YA/teen Poetry and Prose by Angela Ellen Grey and Editor Paige Peterson is Available Now at All Major Online Retailers

The authors of Spirit Pass and Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women & Girls, a Native American series about MMIWG, have published their latest YA/teen book of poetry and prose.




poet

Register for 7th Annual Cascadia Poetry Festival

Celebrate the poetry of the bioregion at the Cascadia Poetics Lab's 7th annual Cascadia Poetry Festival! Surround yourself with a community of open minded and engaged writers through writing workshops, panels, readings and more!




poet

Registration for Year 17 of Poetry Postcard Fest Nears Deadline

Unleash your poetic creativity with Cascadia Poetics Lab's 17th annual Poetry Postcard Fest!




poet

WERNER HERZOG VOICES AN A.I. POET IN NEW AUDIOBOOK TO BE PRODUCED BY HACHETTE AUDIO

I AM CODE: An Artificial Intelligence Speaks to be published in August by Little Brown and Hachette Audio




poet

Poets&Quants Announces the Top 100 highest-funded MBA startups of 2024

The leading publication in graduate business education compiles the most well-funded MBA startups in it's annual feature




poet

Poets&Quants for Undergrads™ Names Best Undergraduate Business Schools for 2024 in Exclusive Rankings

Comprehensive study ranks top 91 business programs based on admissions standards, academic experience, and employment outcomes




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Poets&Quants™ Announces Groundbreaking Business School Showcase at Global Sustainable Development Congress

Times Higher Education and Poets&Quants™ Highlight Business Schools in this Inaugural Partnership




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Poets&Quants™ Honors Best & Brightest Business Majors For 2024

Annual feature profiles 100 graduating seniors who set the bar at their business schools.




poet

Healing Through Words: From Rupi Kaur to Amanda Lovelace, Meet the Poets Leading the Way, and Announcing Beth E. Aubut's Powerful New Poetry Collection Soul Sold

Why Readers of Rupi Kaur and Amanda Lovelace Will Love Soul Sold




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CASCADIA POETICS LAB TO HOST 8TH CASCADIA POETRY FESTIVAL

Seattle bioregionalism poetry nonprofit to host 8th poetry festival featuring poets from throughout the U.S. and Canada. The festival will include a Día de los Muertos celebration and celebrate the release of the nonprofit's second poetry anthology.




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Poets&Quants™ Names H. Rao Unnava Dean of the Year in Annual Honors

Poets&Quants names the 14th dean of the year




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Poets&Quants™ Announces Winners of Inaugural Business Education Awards

The leading publication in business education unveils the top honors in business education. UC Davis, American Kogod, Gies Business, and IMD among the honorees.




poet

Marquis Who's Who Honors Laurence Overmire for Expertise in Writing, Poetry, Genealogy and Theater

Laurence Overmire celebrated as a renowned author, poet, educator and genealogist




poet

Poets&Quants™ Names Best & Brightest MBAs of 2024

Annual feature celebrates graduating business students for achievement and influence




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Actress, & First Time Published Author, Megan Davis to Release Book of Poetry "What Breaks Us" in June for Pride Month

With Her Compilation of Highly Personal & Inspirational Poetry, Megan Davis Doesn't Hold Back and the Results are Raw, Thought-Provoking, and Provocative that Touches on Themes from Addiction, Personal Relationships, Sexuality, Dependency, and more




poet

Poetic Ceramic Creations

Delphine Joly Pujol est l’âme poétique et inspirée qui se cache derrière OcciD Créations. Issue du milieu de la biologie, dont elle emprunte le vocabulaire pour intituler ses collections, l’artiste est passionnée de céramique depuis 15 ans. Fascinée par la naissance d’une pièce à partir des quatre éléments que sont l’eau, la terre, l’air et […]




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Poetry Reading with Daisy Atterbury and Adrienne Raphael

Nov 14, 2024, 6:30pm EST

The Center for Humanities at Tufts (CHAT) invites the Tufts community to join us on November 14 for a poetry reading with Daisy Atterbury and Adrienne Raphael, moderated by Professor Sarah Akant.

Daisy Atterbury is a poet, essayist and scholar. Daisy’s most recent book, The Kármán Line (2024), investigates queer life and fantasies of space and place with an interest in unraveling colonial narratives in the American Southwest.

Adrienne Raphel is the author of Thinking Inside the Box: Adventures with Crosswords and the Puzzling People Who Can't Live Without Them and the poetry collections Our Dark Academia and What Was It For. She teaches writing at CUNY Baruch and lives in Brooklyn.

All are welcome. Contact humanities@tufts.edu with questions.

BuildingFung House 48 Professors Row
Campus Location: Medford/Somerville campus
City: Somerville, MA 02144
Campus: Medford/Somerville campus
Location Details: Conference Room
Open to Public: Yes
Primary Audience(s): Faculty, Postdoctoral Fellows, Staff, Students (Graduate), Students (Postdoctoral), Students (Undergraduate)
Event Type: Lecture/Presentation/Seminar/Talk
Subject: Humanities
Event Sponsor: School of Arts and Sciences
Event Sponsor Details: Tufts University
Event Contact Name: Amanda Pepper
Event Contact Emailamanada.pepper@tufts.edu
Event Contact Phone: 2037639353
RSVP Information: No RSVP needed
Event Admission: Free
More infohumanities.tufts.edu…



  • 2024/11/14 (Thu)

poet

African American Protest Poetry

New essay by Trudier Harris, "African American Protest Poetry," added to Freedom's Story: Teaching African American Literature and History, TeacherServe from the National Humanities Center.




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La National Gallery presenta «Van Gogh: Poetas y amantes»

La National Gallery presenta «Van Gogh: Poetas y amantes» Con motivo de su 200 aniversario,...




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The National Gallery presents “Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers”

The National Gallery presents “Van Gogh: Poets and Lovers” To mark its 200th anniversary, the...




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Ep. 6 The Poetry Map with George Elliott Clarke

Poet laureate George Elliott Clarke discusses The Poetry Map from Toronto Public Libraries, diversity and police culture, and more. Also, Roman Mars from 99% Invisible shares his opinions on the greatest libraries in North America. Original music by Jay Ferguson and Kris Magnuson. More about The Cities Podcast: http://news.utoronto.ca/podcasts Explore The Poetry Map from Toronto Public Libraries: http://www.torontopoetry.ca/ TRANSCRIPT The Cities Podcast […]




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The Moth Radio Hour: Live from the Cowboy Poetry Gathering

In this hour, stories from the Elko Cowboy Poetry Gathering. Hosted by Dame Wilburn, with additional hosting from Jay Allison. A woman says goodbye to her childhood ranch; a young girl finally gets her wish to own a pet; a Guatemalan teenager goes on a silent and stealthy mission; and a Dakota man tries to track down someone he has not seen in years. The Moth Radio Hour is produced by The Moth and Jay Allison of Atlantic Public Media in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

Hosted by: Jay Allison

Storytellers:

Teresa Jordan returns home to a parched and cracked land.

Dame Wilburn visits Macon, Georgia for a summer and gets an unconventional pet.

Nestor Gomez flees the Guatemalan Civil War to the safety of his mother’s home.

Bobby Wilson hears of a Dakota man he desperately tries to meet.