The Art of Poetry is Shining a Light

Today I want to share a poem by Professor Claudia Rankine, who is currently with the New York University Creating Writing Program. This poem shines a light on systemic racism and social injustice. It was written during the pandemic, after the murder of George Floyd. Among other elegant elements, it has a delicate reference to Rousseau’s The Social Contract. I started to read The Social Contract myself during this period of time, because I was hoping to find something I could apply to the current social environment. I found more questions than answers, which I suppose is somewhat typical of philosophy.

Tomorrow I’ll discuss Rollo Dilworth’s setting of this poem to music. Here is Professor Rankine’s Weather.

Weather

On a scrap of paper in the archive is written

I have forgotten my umbrella. Turns out

in a pandemic everyone, not just the philosopher,

is without. We scramble in the drought of information

held back by inside traders. Drop by drop. Face

covering? No, yes. Social distancing? Six feet

under for underlying conditions. Black.

Just us and the blues kneeling on a neck

with the full weight of a man in blue.

Eight minutes and forty-six seconds.

In extremis. I can’t breathe gives way

to asphyxiation, to giving up this world,

and then mama, called to, a call

to protest, fire, glass, say their names, say

their names, white silence equals violence,

the violence of again, a militarized police

force teargassing, bullets ricochet, and civil

unrest taking it, burning it down. Whatever

contracts keep us social compel us now

to disorder the disorder. Peace. We’re out

to repair the future. There’s an umbrella

by the door, not for yesterday but for the weather

that’s here. I say weather but I mean

a form of governing that deals out death

and names it living. I say weather but I mean

a November that won’t be held off. This time

nothing, no one forgotten. We are here for the storm

that’s storming because what’s taken matters.

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One response to “The Art of Poetry is Shining a Light”

  1. […] Rankine wrote a powerful poem that I posted here. As we continue to rehearse Dr. Dilworth’s setting for the poem, I discover more about how the […]

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