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Contemporary Black Poetry Analysis

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The Contemporary Black Poetry Project featured three award winning African-American poets from Michigan: Toi Derricotte, Naomi Long Madgett, and Herbert Woodward Martin. The poets ranged in age from seventy-five to ninety-three. The Contemporary Black Poetry Project featured four public readings this fall. I attended the fourth reading which took place on October first in Harbor Springs, Michigan, at the Harbor Springs United Methodist Church. All of the poets’ pieces and performances were exquisite, however in this essay I will focus exclusively on Mr. Herbert Woodward Martin’s work. African American culture, music, and history greatly influence Mr. Martin’s poems. Mr. Martin read five of his pieces at the event. Three of them came from his book The Log of the Vigilante. He began the reading by singing a gospel hymn, …show more content…

He spoke quickly and rhythmically, the poem centering on Moses, who “sets the chillins free.” Mr. Martin finished this poem by singing “Ms. Mary don’t you weep and mourn.” The following three poems came from his book. The first poem was called “0300-Reward Poster”. It was based on a reward poster for a runaway slave. The poem painted the image of an African American man who was repeatedly described as “ordinary”. The use of the word ‘ordinary’ emphasized the idea that the man was less than human; that he was nothing more than an object to be owned. Mr. Martin finished the poem by singing “lord how come we here?” The next poem, called “0100”, was in the form of a letter to President Lincoln from a woman asking if she really was free. She wanted to know if she could leave the plantation she was on to go visit/find some of her family. The poem ended with Mr. Martin singing “sometimes I feel like a motherless child”. The final

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