English, asked by jimavallone, 7 months ago

What are the best poems on civil rights demonstrations or protests?

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

Protest means objection, complaint or revolt. Protest poems or protest literature refers to works that address to real socio-political issues and express objection against them. For instance, the feminist poem "Daddy" is also a poem of female protest.

Answered by shauryaindia05
0

Answer:

Explanation:

Pithy and powerful, poetry is a popular art form at protests and rallies. From the civil rights and women’s liberation movements to Black Lives Matter, poetry is commanding enough to gather crowds in a city square and compact enough to demand attention on social media. Speaking truth to power remains a crucial role of the poet in the face of political and media rhetoric designed to obscure, manipulate, or worse. The selection of poems below call out and talk back to the inhumane forces that threaten from above. They expose grim truths, raise consciousness, and build united fronts. Some insist, as Langston Hughes writes, “That all these walls oppression builds / Will have to go!” Others seek ways to actively “make peace,” as Denise Levertov implores, suggesting that “each act of living” might cultivate collective resistance. All rail against complacency and demonstrate why poetry is necessary and sought after in moments of political crisis.

I look at the world

LANGSTON HUGHES

Caged Bird

MAYA ANGELOU

Poem (I lived in the first century of world wars)

MURIEL RUKEYSER

Boy Breaking Glass

GWENDOLYN BROOKS

Bent to the Earth

BLAS MANUEL DE LUNA

RIOT

GWENDOLYN BROOKS

America

ALLEN GINSBERG

America

CLAUDE MCKAY

What Kind of Times Are These

ADRIENNE RICH

The Envoy of Mr. Cogito

ZBIGNIEW HERBERT

Tonight, in Oakland

DANEZ SMITH

What He Thought

HEATHER MCHUGH

We Are Not Responsible

HARRYETTE MULLEN

lady liberty

TATO LAVIERA

Vivas To Those Who Have Failed: The Paterson Silk Strike, 1913

MARTÍN ESPADA

Urban Affection

EMANUEL XAVIER

A Song for Soweto

JUNE JORDAN

Usage

HAYAN CHARARA

If We Must Die

CLAUDE MCKAY

Short Speech to My Friends

AMIRI BARAKA

Rosa Parks

NIKKI GIOVANNI

Dear Gaybashers

JILL MCDONOUGH

ICE Agents Storm My Porch

MARIA MELENDEZ KELSON

We Lived Happily During the War

ILYA KAMINSKY

Ghazal, After Ferguson

YUSEF KOMUNYAKAA

You, If No One Else

TINO VILLANUEVA

Turnt

JULIANA SPAHR

Beat! Beat! Drums!

WALT WHITMAN

Staggerlee wonders

JAMES BALDWIN

Still I Rise

MAYA ANGELOU

At the Bomb Testing Site

WILLIAM E. STAFFORD

where our protest sound

LENELLE MOÏSE

Not one more refugee death

EMMY PÉREZ

London

WILLIAM BLAKE

Mind Core

JUAN FELIPE HERRERA

In the Middle of This Century

YEHUDA AMICHAI

Ways of Rebelling

NATHALIE HANDAL

Logic

ALICE NOTLEY

To the Censorious Ones

ANNE WALDMAN

They Feed They Lion

PHILIP LEVINE

The Sign in My Father’s Hands

MARTÍN ESPADA

At the Un-National Monument along the Canadian Border

WILLIAM E. STAFFORD

Apology for Apostasy?

ETHERIDGE KNIGHT

(Riot Police)

SUN YUNG SHIN

America Politica Historia, in Spontaneity

GREGORY CORSO

My Generation Reading the Newspapers

KENNETH PATCHEN

For the Consideration of Poets

HAKI R. MADHUBUTI

In My Name

DAVID RODERICK

10-Year-Old Shot Three Times, but She’s Fine

PATRICIA SMITH

Something is Coming Toward Us

ALLI WARREN

Helen Betty Osborne

MARILYN DUMONT

Passive Voice

LAURA DA'

Watts Bleeds

LUIS J. RODRÍGUEZ

Hold It Down

GINA MYERS

Advice from Rock Creek Park

STEPHANIE BURT

The Talking Day

MICHAEL KLEIN

Jordan

NICK ARNOLD

If We Must Die

CLAUDE MCKAY

A Poem for Pulse

JAMESON FITZPATRICK

Poem by Poem

JUAN FELIPE HERRERA

Stonewall to Standing Rock

JULIAN TALAMANTEZ BROLASKI

Narrative: Ali

ELIZABETH ALEXANDER

Cell Block on Chena River

DG NANOUK OKPIK

My Standard Response

KARENNE WOOD

Haiku and Tanka for Harriet Tubman

SONIA SANCHEZ

The Riots

RUBEN QUESADA

Dakota Homecoming

GWEN NELL WESTERMAN

When I Think of Tamir Rice While Driving

REGINALD DWAYNE BETTS

To Bless the Memory of Tamir Rice

TSITSI ELLA JAJI

Letter Beginning with Two Lines by Czesław Miłosz

MATTHEW OLZMANN

Protest in Philippines

DAVID LAU

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