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What Sparks Poetry is a serialized feature that explores experiences and ideas that spark the writing of new poems. In Ecopoetry Now, poets from Canada, Mexico, and the US engage in an ecopoetic conversation across borders. Each Monday's delivery brings you a poem from the author and an excerpt from their essay.
Rita Wong
let the colonial borders be seen for the inaccurate fabrications that they are
i hereby honour what the flow of water teaches us
hydrology is a sacred bond, embedded in our plump, moist cells,
in our breaths that transpire to return to the clouds that gave us life through rain
in the rivers and aquifers that we and our neighbours drink from
in the oceans that our foremothers came from
a watershed teaches not only humbleness but climate literacy
the languages we need to interpret the sea’s rising voice
its currents bearing the plastic from our fridges and closets
a gyre of karma recirculates in the form of body burden
i hereby invoke watershed wisdom to guide us through the toxic muck
i will apprentice myself to creeks and tributaries, groundwater and glaciers
listen for the salty pulse within, the blood that recognizes marine ancestry
in its chemical composition and intuitive pull
i will learn through immersion, flotation, and transformation
as water expands and contracts, i will fit myself to its ever-changing dimensions
molecular and spectacular, water will return what we give it, be that
arrogance and poison, reverence and light, ambivalence and respect
let our societies be revived as watersheds
from the book UNDERCURRENT Nightwood Editions
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Cover of Rita Wong's book, undercurrent
What Sparks Poetry:
Rita Wong (Vancouver, BC, unceded Coast Salish territories) on Ecopoetry Now


"In the context of a colonized society that reduces freedom into superficial consumer choices or bluntly eliminates that freedom through systemic violence, writing can question unjust hierarchies and unthinking habits that need to be reconsidered. It can make space for the imagination to move swiftly as dragonflies at dusk, or as easily as otters floating affectionately together. It makes room for a world where every creature has a place, every life form matters."
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"Tupac Shakur’s Unseen Childhood Poetry"

"The writing in the booklet is a rare depiction of Shakur’s early talent for wordplay and lyricism....and deals with themes that he would go on to explore with his music as an adult including Black liberation, mass incarceration, race and masculinity."

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