Writing Poetry as Witness
Arts + Literature Laboratory 111 S. Livingston St., Madison, Wisconsin 53703
press release: WRITER'S CRAFT TALK
Come at 6:30 and share a brown bag dinner with other writers. It's a great chance to meet other writers, trade writing tips, talk about favorite books, or even just browse our smALL Press Library. Craft talk begins at 7:00 PM.
What three things can never be done? Forget. Keep silent. Stand alone. - Muriel Rukeyser, “The Book of the Dead” (1938)
Poetry’s imperative, to speak and remember, calls on writers to stand witness to the struggles and crises around us. One technique that poets can employ was pioneered by Muriel Rukeyser in “The Book of the Dead”: the documentary poem. Rukeyser’s poem takes as its subject the Hawks Nest Tunnel disaster. She traveled to Gauley Bridge, West Virginia, with a photographer friend, intent on documenting the widespread incidence of silicosis among miners, and the power companies’ attempts to cover up their role in the disaster. The resulting long poem assembles medical descriptions, interviews, court transcripts—even stock market data—alongside lyric poems about the West Virginia landscape, to capture the effects of corporate greed on both the people and the land of West Virginia. It is in part because of Rukeyser’s work that the Hawks Nest disaster received the attention it deserved.In this talk, award-winning poet Rebecca Dunham will talk about documentary work being done by poets today, the ways in which this sort of work might influence a poet's creative process, and share ideas for how any writer might incorporate some of these techniques into their own writing.This project is funded in part by a grant from the Madison Arts Commission, with additional funds from the Wisconsin Arts Board.A $3-5 donation helps us continue our great programming.