Poems of Protest, Resistance, and Empowerment
Why poetry is necessary and sought after during crises.
BY The Editors
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.
- Langston Hughes
Caged Bird
Maya Angelou
Making Peace
Denise Levertov
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
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
Urban Affection
Emanuel Xavier
A Song for Soweto
June Jordan
Usage
Hayan Charara
Rosa Parks
Nikki Giovanni
Dear Gaybashers
Jill McDonough
- 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
- Margaret Walker
London
William Blake
- 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
America, I Sing You Back
Allison Adelle Hedge Coke
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
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
- Sonia Sanchez
The Riots
Ruben Quesada
Dakota Homecoming
Gwen Nell Westerman
- Reginald Dwayne Betts
To Bless the Memory of Tamir Rice
Tsitsi Ella Jaji
Letter Beginning with Two Lines by Czesław Miłosz
Matthew Olzmann
- Craig Santos Perez
Riot
Gwendolyn Brooks
America, I Am
James Cagney