Danez Smith at the 19th Annual Brave New Voices Festival

For a while now, the wits among us have noted that this moment on the American clock would do amazing things for art, force it to burn away fat and bullshit, and grapple with the real. And that’s happening. Black and brown poets, filmmakers, and visual artists are providing a necessary counterbalance to a mainstream media that is a proud handmaiden to the status quo. In hip-hop, Kendrick Lamar, J. Cole and Vic Mensa have all stepped up to the plate – flaws and all – and found voice and vision. For artists and their audience, bearing witness means speaking truth, and walking a fine line between finding catharsis and pouring salt in your own wounds. Truthfully, though, if a choice just absolutely had to be made, the preference would be for wack art all around, and a world in which black, brown, queer, and poor bodies were valued.

At the recent Annual Brave New Voices Festival, which hosted almost six hundred students in Washington D.C., poet Danez Smith further cemented his position as one of contemporary American poetry’s most vital voices. Though anchored in Blackness & queerness, his work speaks to experiences of all marginalized and dismissed peoples. Below is a clip of his performance.

Ask not what your country can do for you

Ask if your country is your country

Ask if your country belongs to your country folk

 

Ask if your comfort means broke schools and food deserts

On the other side of town

 Ask if your new apartment used to belong to someone

Who couldn’t afford to look like you

 

All lives don’t matter the same as all lives

Some lives matter only to ourselves

Some lives matter only in they hood

Some lives matter of fact

And some lives up for debate

 

Diamond Reynolds is a hero

Where no one should have to be a hero

Steady as she be

With daughter in the back seat

With Philando slowly becoming a memory

Right next to her

Gun still pointed at his body

Cop outside the window

Scared of a man he already proved to be a myth

Top photo by Hieu Minh Nguyen

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