“What survivor hasn’t had her struggle made spectacle?”
Don’t miss this week’s Best of Button playlist, featuring the top-viewed recent videos on the Button YouTube Channel. Today’s additions: Emi Mahmoud, Sabrina Benaim, Nora Cooper, & Neil Hilborn! Congrats poets!
“When they buried me, they put these coins over my eyes, and I used them as bus fare to get back to Earth, just so I can look for you.”
Don’t miss this week’s Best of Button playlist, featuring the top-viewed recent videos on the Button YouTube Channel. Today’s additions: Rudy Francisco, Muna Abdulahi, & William Evans! Congrats poets!
Appreciating poetry is often about patience: sitting with a poem, meditating on it, and re-reading it multiple times. With spoken word, we don’t always get a chance to do that. This series is about taking that chance, and diving a little deeper into some of the new poems going up on Button.
“Look, y’all: they look like slow green explosions…”
Spoken word is “a thing that people can do,” in that anyone can write a poem, stand up in front of other people, and say it out loud. But it’s also something deeper than that– it’s a community, a movement, a culture in which certain practices, ideas, and impulses are shared.
So we can talk about an individual poem by itself, focusing on things like structure, word choice, and performance– but we can also talk about an individual poem in the context of that culture. We can talk about how it exists in dialogue with other poems. We can talk about how the poem “works” on a slam stage, vs. in a literary journal, vs. in a cypher with a bunch of friends, vs. at a political rally. People are free to disagree with me on this, but one thing I really appreciate about spoken word and slam poetry– as culture– is this acknowledgement that context matters, that who we are, where we are, and who is listening all impact what the poem “is.”
This poem is brilliant and beautiful in a vacuum, sure. Danez is one of the best writers in the world. But what really strikes me about this poem is how it plays with context. For example, all of the names listed are real people; I know some of them, and that impacts how I hear the poem. But here’s a deeper example: people outside of poetry circles may not be aware that the phrase “poems about trees” is very often shorthand for a kind of “traditional,” MFA-informed, white-centered, aggressively apolitical poetry that is often set up as a foil for the current spoken word movement. So Danez taking the *archetype* of that style of poetry, and flipping it so powerfully, serves to also demolish the very idea that there has to be some kind of binary approach to poems, that they can either be “about trees” or “about real shit.” The poem isn’t just substantive; it’s also subversive. This is what culture-shifting work looks like.
“He likes big women? And yet he’s not been thrown a parade?!”
Don’t miss this week’s Best of Button playlist, featuring the top-viewed recent videos on the Button YouTube Channel. Today’s additions: Rachel Wiley, Jared Singer, & Alysia Harris! Congrats poets!
Make sure to check out Rachel’s incredible book, NOTHING IS OKAY.
After much deliberation and internal conversations, Button Poetry has made the decision to suspend the publication of Jared Paul’s Songs From The Bottom Of A Mineshaft. While we do understand that many people were anticipating the release of the book, we felt uncomfortable standing by this product.
In our work and everyday lives, we strive to honor the morals we set in place as a company around uplifting marginalized voices, making space for stories of both pain and healing, and honoring and protecting survivors of trauma. We look to take accountability and rectify any harm we have caused. While we will be separating ourselves from the publication of Jared’s book, we hope to continue to take steps in the right direction as a company and a platform for vital and necessary work. We hope you’ll continue believing in this vision.
“Remember: when they look right through you, you’re still there.”
Don’t miss this week’s Best of Button playlist, featuring the top-viewed recent videos on the Button YouTube Channel. Today’s additions: Guante, EJ Schoenborn, & Sabrina Benaim! Congrats poets!