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Lurk and Leap [1]

Poetry [2]
8.6.19

“I wanted to leave behind speakers who succumbed to paranoia, emaciation, and sleep. More and more, there arose in me speakers who would self-emancipate, lurk and leap, bite and fight, and consume ravenously,” writes Justin Phillip Reed on the Poetry Foundation’s Harriet blog [3] about the poems that came after finishing his book, Indecency (Coffee House Press, 2018). In his essay, Reed considers the figure of the monster in mythology—as a metaphor and an agent of dehumanization— and its relation to anti-Black constructions, and finds a revitalizing sense of urgency in confronting these ideas. Think of a current topic or personal situation that has been troubling and exhausting you for some time. Write a poem that combats succumbing to this conflict, one that lurks and leaps, bites and fights. 


Source URL:https://www.pw.org/content/lurk_and_leap

Links
[1] https://www.pw.org/content/lurk_and_leap [2] https://www.pw.org/genre/poetry [3] https://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2019/08/in-my-defense-monsters-notes-on-black-poetic-grotesqueries-composite-humanity-and-freedoms-of-the-horrific-part-1