New Poem, “Chosen Family”, published in The Progressive. Check it out!
https://progressive.org/magazine/poem-chosen-family/
Audio reading: https://soundcloud.com/user-586048179/chosen-family
New Poem, “Chosen Family”, published in The Progressive. Check it out!
https://progressive.org/magazine/poem-chosen-family/
Audio reading: https://soundcloud.com/user-586048179/chosen-family
The latest fall issue of VQR includes new work by Carl Phillips, Rachel Eliza Griffiths, Beth Bachmann, Kiese Laymon, Lacy Johnson, Deborah Eisenber, and more!
Read MoreFeatured Unstoppable Artists include: Tanya Selvaratnam, Sarah Lash, Zoe Buckman, Mickalene Thomas, Blackpaint Studios, Hillary Jordan, Teresita Fernandez, Chitra Ganesh, Natalie White, Tiffany Shlain, Kim Krans, Favianna Rodriguez, Shirin Neshat, Rachel Eliza Griffiths, Xaviera Simmons, Anne Waldman, and Carrie Mae Weems.
Read More"This fourth collection by Rachel Eliza Griffiths transforms what the eye sees; as a gifted photographer as well as poet, this poet is definitely up to the task. The majority of these poems display emotionally subjective meaning: the speaker nimbly drops into moments of import and rapidly gifts image after image, with the splendid attentiveness of her language bringing the reader close. Other poems do reveal their interiority to the reader, using a mixture of lyric and narrative in language that bends the knowable, such as “The Woman and the Branch”: “Carrying the glass / inside my skin to school, I was young. / Show us what you have, the world said.” The theme of womanhood appears immediately, with four poems in the first section using some variation of “woman” in the title, and one discovers that womanhood is essential to nearly all the poems. Griffiths builds thematic layers to create intersectionality, for history is a crossroads for women—the history of just-passed moments and ancestral history, too. Another theme is violence, but rather than relying upon terrifying physical spectacle, Griffiths translates trauma into beauty, and, in turn, presents political transgression. As one reaches the end of the book, Griffiths continues to braid political images through her lyrics, threads that tug the reader through mentions of various forms of abuse: police brutality, violence towards women, and various instances of inhumanity. But throughout this book, glimpses of joy: “Sometimes prayer.” Last words: Though themes reoccur, what is most striking about this collection is Griffiths’s amazing innovation. She revisits themes, yet her familiarity is never stale—she never writes the same poem. Instead, in the words of the ancestors, she “troubles” the moment."
-Honorée Fanonne Jeffers
http://www.kenyonreview.org/kr-online-issue/2016-summer/selections/july-micro-reviews/
"Another author-made videopoem recently published by Voluble, this time from the enormously talented poet and photographer Rachel Eliza Griffiths. Click through to listen to her artist’s statement, where she explains that “‘S’ is the first piece in a trilogy of videos that engage Audre Lorde’s poem The Black Unicorn.” Her discussion of the relationship between audio and video, hearing and seeing in her creation of the video is absolutely fascinating." - Moving Poems
Read MoreRachel Eliza Griffiths is the author of four poetry collections: Lighting the Shadow (Four Way Books, 2015); Mule & Pear (New Issues Poetry & Prose, 2011), which was selected for the 2012 Inaugural Poetry Award by the Black Caucus American Library Association; The Requited Distance (The Sheep Meadow Press, 2011); and Miracle Arrhythmia (Willow Books, 2010). Also a visual artist, she is the creator of Poets on Poetry (P.O.P.), a series of interviews that gathers more than fifty contemporary poets together in conversation to discuss poetry in relation to individual human experience and culture. Her honors include fellowships from Cave Canem, the Millay Colony for the Arts residency, the New York State Summer Writers Institute, the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, Soul Mountain, and Vermont Studio Center. Griffiths teaches creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College.
This free public lecture is supported in part by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and held in conjunction with the Spring 2016 course “Embodying the Object: Writing with the Collection,” a collaboration between the Johnson Museum and the Creative Writing Program.
The Museum is open tonight until 8:00 PM!
Read More"I wonder how the sky swelled when Gabrielle Douglas first leapt toward the sunlight of her promise. As a writer, it's an image in my mind I revisit in a growing collection of pictures of her, braced against the air and the beauty of her graceful brown skin."
Read More
Elbow Room: How the Dark Room Collective Made Space for a Generation of African American Writers, by Sophia Nguyen
http://harvardmagazine.com/2016/03/elbow-room