Split This Rock Poetry Festival

Date: 
Wednesday, March 10, 2010 - 2:00pm - Sunday, March 14, 2010 - 1:00am
Location : 
DC

Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness
Second biennial festival celebrates poetry's power as an agent of change

www.splitthisrock.org

Washington, D.C. - Split This Rock Poetry Festival: Poems of Provocation & Witness comes to the historic U Street neighborhood of Washington, D.C., March 10-13, 2010. Poets, artists, social justice activists, and community organizers from across the area and the nation will take to the stages and streets of the capital to celebrate poetry as an agent of social change.

Split This Rock Poetry Festival offers a diverse mix of programs, including poetry readings every evening on the main stage at Bell Multicultural High School, workshops and panel discussions about the intersection of poetry and social change, a book fair, films, youth programming, parties, and activism.

As the country continues to grapple with two wars, the economic crisis, and social and environmental ills, Split This Rock offers participants opportunities to speak out, make common cause, and explore the many ways poets are working for change through their writing, activism, and community work. Co-Director Sarah Browning said, "At times of crisis, poetry that looks directly at our world and struggles to understand, to bridge differences, to imagine other possibilities than those endlessly repeated by politicians and pundits is more important than ever."

A new feature is a free Social Change Book Fair. On Saturday, March 13, at the Thurgood Marshall Center for Service and Heritage (1816 12th St. NW), festival participants and members of the public can explore progressive presses, literary magazines, independent newspapers, and social justice and literary organizations. Other free events during the festival include a youth poetry open mic and the final round of competition for the D.C. Youth Slam Team, the teen poetry group that will go on to compete at the national slam competition in Los Angeles in June.

As the country reaches the milestone of $1 trillion spent on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, festival participants will engage in peaceful action and use poetry to speak to those in power. A "public poem," to be spontaneously created at a federal government site on the afternoon of Thursday, March 11, will imagine what the next $1 trillion could - and should - be spent on. "Based in our nation's capital, Split This Rock provides opportunities for all who gather to speak out for a more just ordering of our nation's priorities," Browning said.

Split This Rock was incorporated in Washington, D.C., as a nonprofit organization in 2009. The biennial festival is just one part of Split This Rock's larger mission. "All Split This Rock's programs are designed to integrate poetry of provocation and witness into public life and to support the poets who are writing this vital work," Browning said. "We collaborate with community and social change organizations, organize public events such as the festival, readings and forums, sponsor contests to promote socially engaged poetry, and provide workshops on craft and the writing life for youth and adult poets."

Featured poets are Chris Abani, Lillian Allen, Sinan Antoon, Francisco Aragón, Jan Beatty, Martha Collins, Cornelius Eady, Martín Espada, Andrea Gibson, Allison Hedge Coke, Natalie Illum, Fady Joudah, Toni Asante Lightfoot, Richard McCann, Jeffrey McDaniel, Lenelle Moïse, Nancy Morejón, Mark Nowak, Wang Ping, Patricia Smith, Arthur Sze, Quincy Troupe, and Bruce Weigl. Biographies, photos, sample poems, and interviews are available upon request.

Major contributors to the festival are Busboys and Poets, the Institute for Policy Studies, DC Poets Against the War, and Teaching for Change.

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For interviews, news inquiries, and bookings, please contact Sarah Browning, 202-787-5210, browning@splitthisrock.org, www.splitthisrock.org.

Split This Rock Poetry Festival
1112 16th Street NW, Suite 600
Washington, D.C. 20036
202-787-5210
www.SplitThisRock.org
info@splitthisrock.org

Split This Rock
Ticketed and Free Events
 
Mainstage Readings
All take place at Bell Multicultural High School
3101 16th Street NW, Washington, DC
Columbia Heights on the Green Line Metro
Ticket price: $8/$5 for students
For more information and full festival schedule: 
www.splitthisrock.org, info@splitthisrock.org, 202-787-5210
 
Wednesday, March 10, 8 pm
Cornelius Eady, Andrea Gibson, Wang Ping, and the Poets-in-Residence of Busboys & Poets: Holly Bass, Beny Blaq, and Derrick Weston Brown
 
Thursday, March 11, 8 pm
Lillian Allen, Francisco Aragón, Nancy Morejón, Mark Nowak
 
Friday, March 12, 5 pm
Martín Espada, Patricia Smith, Arthur Sze
 
Friday, March 12, 8 pm
Jan Beatty, Natalie Illum, Jeffrey McDaniel, Quincy Troupe
 
Saturday, March 13, 5 pm
Allison Hedge Coke, Fady Joudah, Richard McCann, Lenelle Moïse
 
Saturday, March 13, 8 pm
Chris Abani, Sinan Antoon, Martha Collins, Toni Asante Lightfoot

 
Other Festival Highlights
 
Open Mics, Hosted by Regie Cabico
- Wednesday, March 10, 10:30 pm - midnight, Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 14th & V Streets, NW, mothertongue featuring.
- Thursday, March 11, 10:30 - midnight, Marx Café, 3203 Mt. Pleasant Street, NW, Sulu DC featuring.
- Friday, March 12, 2-3:30 pm, Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 14th & V Streets, NW, 11th Hour Poetry Slam featuring.
The cost is $5 or free with festival registration. Priority on the open mic goes to festival registrants. Bring a 3-minute poem to share or just come listen to poets from all over the country!
 
Split This Rock Film Program
Thursday, March 11, 2 pm and 10:30 pm
Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 14th & V Streets, NW
The cost is $8/$5 for students - at the door.

Free Events
 
- Opening Celebration, Wednesday, March 10, 6-7 pm, Langston Room, Busboys and Poets, 14th & V Streets, NW, U Street/Cardozo stop on the green line. We will welcome participants and celebrate DC youth voices, with the Young Women's Drumming Empowerment Project, the Shakti Brigade, winners of Split This Rock's World & Me Youth Poetry Contest, and members of the DC Youth Slam Team.
 
- Poetry in the Streets, Thursday, March 11, 4:30-6:30 pm, Upper Senate Park, north side of the US Capitol Building, Union Station stop on the Red line metro. We'll be creating a group poem calling on Congress to imagine a more humane way to spend the next $1 trillion, now that our government has spent that outrageous sum on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. All are invited to step up to the microphone and contribute a line of up to 12 words imagining a nation with radically reordered priorities.

- Social Change Book Fair, Saturday, March 13, 9:30 am to 4 pm, Thurgood Marshall Center for Service & Heritage, 1816 12th Street, NW, at S Street, NW, in the U Street neighborhood. Progressive presses, magazines, and literary and social justice organizations will be represented. 
 
- Youth programs - Saturday, March 13, 12:30-1:30 pm Teen Open Mic with special guest former DC slam champion and Split This Rock featured poet Jeffrey McDaniel. 2-4 pm DC Youth Slam Team final round of competition. Winners will represent DC at Brave New Voices, the national teen slam, in LA in July. Both are at Bell Multicultural High School, 16th & Irving Streets, NW, in Columbia Heights.
Poetry In The Streets

Torn Between Bitterness and Hope, Poets Bring Inspiration to Our Nation's Lawmakers
All are welcome!
 
The United States has now spent $1 trillion on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Meanwhile, our public schools and universities are facing massive cuts, millions of Americans are without health care, the earth is desperate for loving
attention. Clearly, our lawmakers need the poets to tell them how to spend the next $1 trillion.


Bring your vision for the country and the planet to the Capitol!

When: Thursday, March 11
4:30 - 6pm

Where:  Upper Senate Park,
 U.S. Capitol Grounds
 
Click here for a map.
 
We will create and read aloud a collaborative Cento poem at Upper Senate Park. Please bring a line from a poem (up to 12 words), by you or by someone else, that articulates your vision of a dramatic reordering of our nation's priorities. Write or type your line on a piece of paper. Include the name of the poet, your name (if different), and your home town.

Feel free to bring signs, but no poles bigger than ¾" around and no signs offering anything for sale.

How to Get There
We will meet at Upper Senate Park on the U.S. Capitol Grounds, near Union Station, on Metro's Red line (or Archives-Navy Memorial-Penn Quarter on the Green/Yellow lines).

The #96 bus leaves from the northwest corner of U and 14th Street NW near the festival workshop and panel sites and goes right to the park, stopping at the corner of D Street NW and Louisiana Avenue NW.