By Peter DeVries, Claudia Esparza, Jolynne Fisher, John Franklin, Steve Maack, Brittany Rubin, & Kiara Sosa-Suarez At the 2021 KATE Conference, I (Steve Maack) led a session about reigniting our teaching passions and reemerging from pandemic isolation following the last 20 months. I began with a piece by an incarcerated former student, Alex Tretbar, who published a piece in KATE’s journal, Kansas English (vol. 102), called “‘A Pair of Ragged Claws’: Poetry and Pedagogy in Prison.” We looked at some of Alex’s poetry (from which the title of this collaborative poem comes and can be found in “A Pair of Ragged Claws”) and at some poems by Jimmy Santiago Baca, a poet and memoirist who learned to read and write in prison. Alex started a poetry study group in the Oregon prison where he lives, and just before COVID led to a lockdown, he had proposed his poetry study group write a renga, a style of Japanese collaborative poetry consisting of alternating 3-line and 2-line stanzas. In Alex’s honor, I proposed that the attendees at the “Sing Something Sideways” conference session write a collaborative poem to be shared with all of KATE, and the result is below. I provided the opening lines of the renga in the session (an honor traditionally bestowed upon the poet who gathers their collaborators), and discussed renga format, but everything else in the poem comes from the contributors listed above. I provided only light editing to make pronouns and verb tense consistent and to try to order the submissions into something that seems whole. Individual line credits have intentionally been left off to emphasize the collaborative nature of the poem. I could not be more pleased with the result, both as a collaborative exercise and as a poem in its own right. My thanks and congratulations to Peter, Claudia, Jolynne, John, Brittany, and Kiara for attending my session at the KATE Conference, but also for sharing their beautiful lines of verse and giving me permission to share them. Here’s what we came up with: “Sing Something Sideways”: A Poetic Collaboration for Reemergence We awoke one day, In nightmare solitude, sad Glow of filtered screens. A cracked-concrete world where the Cold sun burns with wind unleashed. Isolation -- Alone and yet not alone, Surrounded day in and day out by chaos inside, Searching for, Longing for the peace of the outside once more. We fearfully stagger, Pursuing a light That scatters across the cage. Filtered, fractured, sifted, lost, Shelved until a time unknown. Burning rays of optimism -- Seclusion infringes on the need to be Absolute and free. Comets, stars, and crescent moons Grace the path in purple chalk. Months in agonizing isolation Begging for just a glimpse Of connection. Sideways across a window A sunbeam beckons us out. Barred from grasping its glow It dances — It taunts. The glare swallows the oxygen, Leaving us empty with our solitude. Listen to our poem We want to read this aloud We want to make you hear us! Pieces of broken marble Joined in hues of blue and gold. We finally re-emerge, Igniting feelings of warmth, Together again. About the Author Steve Maack is a National Board Certified Teacher and English department co-chair at Wichita High School East. He is a past president of the Kansas Association of Teachers of English and just completed his thirtieth year teaching in the Wichita Public Schools. Steve can be reached at [email protected] or on twitter, @stevemaack.
3 Comments
Nathan Whitman
11/17/2021 05:44:28 pm
Thank you all for this inspiring post and resonating poem. Nearly every stanza made me think of my own experience in the pandemic year(s) -- a stark reminder of how despite our solitude the last 20 months, we really aren't alone.
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Steve Maack
11/29/2021 08:36:28 pm
I sent the renga to Alex, and I received a response today. Here's what he said: "It's kind of remarkable: I never would've expected, planning the renga exercise so long ago, that A) it would be waylaid by a pandemic, and B) it would end up being executed at a presentation by you [Steve]! If you get a chance, please let those who participated know that it is extremely gratifying to interface with them in such a way, despite the obvious distance and constraints. Thank you, thank you, thank you."
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Brooke Johnson
12/1/2021 06:12:18 pm
What an amazing project and collaborative piece! Thanks for sharing.
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