Finding Poems: A Creative Writing Retreat Series by Alexis Pauline Gumbs*
This
set of 6 one-day community writing retreats over a six month period is
designed to offer writers at all levels an opportunity to find the poems
speaking to them everywhere and to deepen their poetic practice by
drawing inspiration from black feminist poets. Each retreat will be all
day on a Saturday in Durham, NC and will include meals, inspiration,
nerdy contextualization and loving support from an exuberant educator
who has been creating transformative writing space for over 15 years.
1. The Lorde Concordance and Oracle Building (inspired by Audre Lorde)
This
first retreat is about queerly finding poems in the alphabet. Drawing
on Alexis’s Lorde Concordance practice, this retreat consists of
activities that re-alphabetize poems in order to find new messages, and
sometimes the same messages and some times silliness. Every poem we
love is a possible oracle. Each participant should bring a favorite
poem.
2. A Thousand Words (inspired by Evie Shockley)
In
her Half-Red Sea Evie Shockley has a powerful thousand word poem that
performs the never equal relationship between words and imagery. In
this retreat drawing on our own photographs and some chosen by the
facilitator we will make our own thousand word poems in conversation
with an image that we find meaningful, impossible, sacred or something.
3. Walking Into Poems (inspired by Alice Walker)
Alice
Walker writes everyday planetary poems. As one of the most explicitly
political nature poets ever, the simplicity of her poems has a lot to
teach any poet about the relationship between writing about nature, as
such, and writing about the healing potential “human nature.” This
retreat will consist of a series of guided walks searching for everyday
poems offered by the planet.
4. Poems as Architecture (inspired by June Jordan)
Did
you know that acclaimed black feminist poet June Jordan was an
architect? Not only that, she won the Prix de Rome in architecture in
the 1970s. This retreat asks us to find the poems in the built
environment around us in conversation with the poems that June Jordan
wrote while in Rome (some of her less studied work). For more by Alexis
on June Jordan and the poetics of architecture see:
http://pluraletantum.com/2012/03/21/june-jordan-and-a-black-feminist-poetics-of-architecture-site-1/
5. Lucille Clifton and the Poems of our Past Lives
Many
people do not know that the great poet Lucille Clifton was also in
communication with other worlds. In her archived papers there are
several proposed manuscripts of books that talk about her communication
with the dead. Based on Lucille Clifton’s dream poems and past life
poems this retreat is about looking for the poems in our own dreams,
memories and inklings and maybe even our conversations with folks who
are no longer on this plane.
6. Finding Poems Underwater (inspired by Marlene Nourbese Philip)
Drawing on excerpts from Marlene Nourbese Philip’s epic, orchestral, heteroglossaic book length poem Zong,
written in honor of captured Africans who were intentionally drowned
off the coast of Jamaica so a slaver could collect insurance money for
their deaths, this retreat is about finding poems underwater, in deep
inner space, behind trauma and the unsayable.
Logistics:
In
order to make this rare and priceless opportunity accessible and
sustainable it will be community funded. All workshops will take place
in Durham, NC. Community members interested in participating can help
with a process through which Eternal Summer of the Black Feminist Mind
gains new monthly sustainers of 750 per month (15 sustainers at $50
each, 150 sustainers at $5 or any combination). People who participate
in the sustainer-raiser have first priority in any or all of the 6
retreats. Dates will be set after the success of the community sustainer
raiser. If there is space in any of the retreats community members who
have not participated in that process can sign up with a deposit two
weeks in advance of the retreat and an offering of something they can
afford. If you would like to be part of the sustainer/raiser project email writerwk1 at mac dot com.
ALEXIS PAULINE GUMBS
is a queer black troublemaker, a black feminist love evangelist, a
prayer poet priestess and has a PhD in English, African and
African-American Studies and Women and Gender Studies from Duke
University. Alexis was the first scholar to research in the Audre Lorde
Papers at Spelman College, the June Jordan Papers at Harvard University
and the Lucille Clifton Papers at Emory University and is currently on
tour with her interactive oracle project "The Lorde Concordance" a
series of ritual mobilizing the life and work of Audre Lorde as a
dynamic sacred text. Alexis has also published widely on Caribbean
Women's Literature with a special interest in Dionne Brand. Her
scholarly work is published in Obsidian, Symbiosis, Macomere, The
Routledge Companion to Anglophone Literature, SIGNS, Feminist
Collections, The Black Imagination, Mothering and Hip Hop Culture, The
Business of Black Power and more. Alexis is the author of an acclaimed collection of poems 101 Things That Are Not True About the Most Famous Black Women Alive and poetic work published in Kweli, Vinyl, Backbone, Everyday Genius, Turning Wheel, UNFold, Makeshift and more. She has several books in progress including a book of poems Good Hair Gone Forever, a scholarly monograph on diaspora and the maternal and an educational resource called the School of Our Lorde. She is also the co-editor of a forthcoming edited collection on legacies of radical mothering called This Bridge Called My Baby.
Alexis
has been living in Durham, NC for almost a decade and has been
transformed and enriched by holistic organizing to end gendered violence
and to replace it with sustaining transformative love. Locally she is a
founding member of UBUNTU a women of color and survivor-led coalition
to end sexual violence, of the Earthseed Collective a black and brown
land and spirit reclamation project and the Warrior Healers Organizing
Trust, a community accountable foundation practicing organic reparations
and transforming blood money into blood relations. Nationally Alexis
is co-founder of the Mobile Homecoming Project, an experiential archive
project amplifying generations of black LGBTQ brilliance, and
intergalactically she is the instigator of the Eternal Summer of the
Black Feminist Mind, a multi-media all ages community school based in
the wisdom of black feminist literary practice. Alexis is also a
literary scholar with a PhD in English, Africana Studies and Women's
Studies from Duke University and a widely published poet and essayist.
Alexis likes to pray by walking, dancing, remembering poems and talking
and playing with loved ones.
Alexis was named one of UTNE Reader's
50 Visionaries Transforming the World in 2009, was awarded a Too Sexy
for 501-C3 trophy in 2011 and is one of the Advocate's top 40 under 40
features in 2012.
*This idea was made possible by conversations with two of my favorite poets: Samiya Bashir and Faith Holseart.
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