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Poems Submitted for April 21, 2021

  1. (Re)Emergence: Asian American Histories and Futures
  2. High Stakes Culture Series
  3. Humanities Without Walls Predoctoral Career Diversity Summer Workshop
  4. High Stakes Art
  5. Jill S. Harris Memorial Lecture
  6. Marc and Constance Jacobson Lecture
  7. Norman Freehling Visiting Professorship
  8. Past Programs & Projects
    1. Humanities Without Walls
    2. 2022 HWW Career Diversity Workshop
    3. 2022 Poetry Blast!
    4. Octavia Butler Week
    5. 2021 Poetry Blast!
      1. Prompt a Poem!—A Daily April Poetry Challenge
      2. English Translations
      3. 2021 Poetry Blast Prompt a Poem Submissions
      4. Poems Submitted for April 1, 2021
      5. Poems Submitted for April 2, 2021
      6. Poems Submitted for April 5, 2021
      7. Poems Submitted for April 6, 2021
      8. Poems Submitted for April 7, 2021
      9. Poems Submitted for April 8, 2021
      10. Poems Submitted for April 12, 2021
      11. Poems Submitted for April 9, 2021
      12. Poems Submitted for April 13, 2021
      13. Poems Submitted for April 14, 2021
      14. Poems Submitted for April 15, 2021
      15. Poems Submitted for April 16, 2021
      16. Poems Submitted for April 19, 2021
      17. Poems Submitted for April 20, 2021
      18. Poems Submitted for April 21, 2021
      19. Poems Submitted for April 22, 2021
      20. Poems Submitted for April 23, 2021
      21. Poems Submitted for April 26, 2021
      22. Poems Submitted for April 27, 2021
      23. Poems Submitted for April 28, 2021
      24. Poems Submitted for April 29, 2021
      25. Poems Submitted for April 30, 2021
    6. The Humanities at Work
    7. 2018-19 Year of Humanities and Environments
    8. 2017-18 Year of Archives & Futures
    9. 2016-17 Year of Humanities & Public Policy
    10. 2015-16 Year of Conversions
    11. Early Modern Conversions Project
    12. MCubed Humanities Projects
    13. 2023 Humanities Afrofutures

Think of some cliché, any cliché, that attempts to teach some life lesson: the grass is always greener on the other side; stop and smell the roses; don’t look a gift horse in the mouth. (Feel free to use one of those if you don’t know a lot of clichés!) Now, forget the cliché. You are living, in the sensory world, the sense of that cliché at the level of physical, not the emotional or psychological, experience of it. You’re stopping, smelling, roses. You’re looking across a fence into greener grass. You’re peering into the mouth of a horse. In your freewrite, learn from this experience the opposite of the cliché. That grass is purple. The horse has a switchblade between its teeth. The roses are plastic. You got this by now ☺

Mundanely MUNDANELY Almost
By Rodney A. Brown

Inquiries round actually
didn't. They feel
lit. Surprised the
easy. Shit drop
bucket. Under in
container's face.
White slicing
exposed. Pee's pee
here. What are
its ___ walking the line flaccid Johnson crossed?

Greener the grass was not. I tried to bloom where I was newly planted.
By Renée Szostek


Seeking green fields, I
leave. Finding only sand, I
cry and plant cacti.

Bees Go Pickle
By MP (with a little help from JP&EP)

They say you catch more bees with honey than vinegar,
We say you can catch more with the right pickle -
Thin-sliced, chip-sized,
Brined sweet with a little pucker,
Bread and butter with a mild pH,
Could drive a hive distracted.

silk purse from a sow’s ear
By Logan Corey

wire-tender hairs folded
in and out, in
and out, like melting
a sandwich together, or fusing
together
split skin