Posts Tagged ‘Kyle Dargan’

Poetry Friday: High School Events, Fall 2011

Friday, September 23rd, 2011

Michele Russo, Poetry Coordinator

We’re pretty excited.  This fall, we’re visiting High Schools that have never hosted a Dodge Poetry Event before.  They may have attended the Dodge Poetry Festival or attended another High School’s Mini-Festival.  The teachers may have participated in Clearing the Spring, Tending the Fountain. This year they took the leap to invite the poets directly into their building.  Here’s a preview of what’s happening this Fall:

  • The Academy of the Holy Angels in Demarest, NJ is hosting a Dodge Poet Visit with Patrick Phillips.
  • Belvidere High School in Warren County is hosting a Mini-Festival featuring BJ Ward and Maria Mazziotti Gillan.
  • North Star Academy Charter High School in Newark is hosting a Mini-Festival featuring Newark native Kyle Dargan.  We’re working on the rest of the line-up.
  • Spotswood High School is hosting a Mini-Festival featuring Joe Weil and Emari DiGiorgio.
  • St. Mary’s High School in Elizabeth is hosting a Poet Visit with John Murillo.
  • University High School in Newark is hosting a Poet Visit. We’re working on setting that up.

Dodge Poet Visits and Dodge Poetry Mini-Festivals are a chance for high school students to explore poetry with accomplished, published Dodge Poets. Dodge Poets give students a way to relate to poetry that is interesting and relevant to them, and through their modeling of curiosity and discovery, encourage students to be lifelong readers and poetry lovers.

We are scheduling more events for the 2011-2012 school year, and we’ll give you an update in a few months. We co-sponsor Poet Visits and Mini-Festivals according to each school’s financial need.  We identify and schedule your Dodge Poets, ensuring that your event is meaningful for your students.

If you think you’d like a Dodge Poetry event in your high school, contact Michele Russo, Poetry Coordinator at mrusso@grdodge.org or 973-540-8442 x113.

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Poetry Fridays: 2010 Festival Poet Kyle Dargan

Friday, May 28th, 2010

Khalil Murrell, Program Associate, Poetry

DarganPhotoIn light of America’s evolving narrative on race, how do today’s writers of color, specifically those of the so-called Hip-Hop Generation, add to one of the nation’s most difficult conversations? How do they embrace a legacy, but also speak authentically about race and ethnicity today without regurgitating the voices of, say, Amiri Baraka, Jayne Cortez, Nikki Giovanni, and Langston Hughes?

Certainly all of these questions cannot be answered here, if at all or through any medium in one sitting. Still, many writers of color including Thomas Sayers Ellis, Suheir Hammad, Kevin Young, and Willie Perdomo have been deeply entrenched in this on-going conversation through their work. These are just some of countless contemporary writers who have added fresh perspectives to race dialogue in poetry.

Newark native Kyle Dargan also adds to this rich conversation, through verse, in his first collection, The Listening. Dargan carries with him an immense reverence for tradition as well as his cultural and artistic heritage —black poets who have come before him—especially evident in poems such as “Search for Robert Hayden,” and “This Knight” written to Etheridge Knight. You can see why heritage is important to Dargan as you watch him interview his grandmother, Ruth Dargan — the first black police detective on the Newark police force – about their generational differences in how they view Newark and the President. (He also wrote an article about it here). His work most often tries to make sense of history and the post-Civil Rights world by bridging gaps between two generations. He seems to find ways to pay homage and yet move forward…to accept and renounce observations in the world.  (Listen here to “Karaoke” and “Quagmire”).

But it’s limiting to see Dargan exclusively through this lense. To read his work is to be present with a writer whose senses are acutely aware of the people and spaces around him. Even his profile picture above seems reminiscent of Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On? album cover. Dargan is, in fact, watching and listening to everything in the present world: the Ali-Frazier fight (Listen to “1975”); his grandparents’ stories; Gnarls Barkley’s St. Elsewhere album; squirrels in East Orange (Read “Redefinition”); his stepfather shaving (Listen to “On Men”); the priests at St. Benedict’s Prep in Newark; and even his friend, Dwayne, getting knocked out at the basketball court in Montclair.

A self-described child of hip-hop, Dargan is also as clever with the word as he is reverential. Read “Of the Sun,” where the first word of each left-aligned line reads downward: “a dark body with yellow skin.” His subjects and references are often musical – Rock N Roll by Mos Def, the Jacksons, a letter from Muddy Waters to Michael Harper. Dargan says Bouquet of Hungers, his second book, was arranged like some of his favorite albums – De La Soul is Dead, Mama’s Gun, Songs in the Key of Life, Electric Circus, etc. – because “they expanded the boundaries and weakened the perceived limitations of their genres.” His work, both hip and academic, attempts the same. Dargan is not just a poet who simply observes the world, he is actively engaged in it.

A recipient of the Cave Canem Poetry Prize, Kyle Dargan is the author of three poetry collections, most recently Logorrhea Dementia, and editor of POST NO ILLS magazine. He is the former managing editor of Callaloo and currently a professor at American University in Washington, D.C. where he also lives.

Please use the “Share your thoughts with us” box below to share other resources you may have found for this poet. In this way, we can build together a mini-wiki-encyclopedia on the 2010 Festival Poets.

Return in the weeks ahead as we continue to profile the 2010 Festival Poets

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The Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival in Newark is October 7 – 10
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Poetry Fridays: The 2010 Festival Poets

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Martin Farawell, Program Director, Poetry

Starting next week and continuing into October, we’ll be using the Poetry Fridays blog to introduce the poets participating in the 2010 Dodge Poetry Festival.  Each post will feature brief profiles of one or more poets, with links to poems, videos, interviews, podcast, bios and anything else of interest we might find in our research.

More importantly, we invite you to join in the process of building these profiles by using the Comments section of each blog to link us to items of interest you might discover about these poets.  Teachers, especially those bringing students to the Festival, can make such contributions part of a research assignment.  In this way, together we can build our own mini-wiki-encyclopedia on the 2010 Festival Poets.

The late Stanley Kunitz once commented on the Festival’s great democratic spirit.  He was referring, in part, to its long tradition of having an amazingly broad, deep and diverse line-up.  The 2010 Festival continues that tradition.  So far, the poets who have agreed to participate include:

Amiri Baraka
Michael Dickman Dunya Mikhail
Hadara Bar-Nadav Rita Dove Joseph Millar
Marjorie Barnes Martín Espada Malena Mörling
Tara Betts Santee Frazier Aimee Nezhukumatathil
Jericho Brown Rigoberto González Sharon Olds
Teresa Carson Kathy Graber Marie Ponsot
Michael Cirelli Penny Harter Claudia Rankine
Billy Collins Bob Hicok Kay Ryan
Kyle Dargan Tyehimba Jess Margo Taft Stever
Kwame Dawes Galway Kinnell Mark Strand
Oliver de la Paz Dorianne Laux Jerry Williams
Matthew Dickman Laura McCullough


Be sure to follow us in the weeks ahead as new names are added to this list, and to meet the 2010 Festival Poets.

You can always view video clips of readings from past Dodge Poetry Festivals on our YouTube channel.