Poetry and Racial Justice and Equality
Witnessing the struggle for freedom, from the American Revolution to the Black Lives Matter movement.
Even though its founding documents profess an egalitarian vision of opportunity and equal treatment of its citizens, rights and liberties deemed inalienable, the United States has struggled to live up to its avowed values of fairness and equality and to extend the privileges of freedom that animated its foundational cause for self-determination and sovereignty after hard-won battles against a progressively tyrannical British monarchy.
Its unapologetic history of white supremacy; genocide of Native Americans fueled by a cultural belief in Manifest Destiny; enslavement of African people; racial segregation and its lingering effects in employment practices, education, housing, medical care, and public facilities; persistence of police murders and other acts of terrorism against ethnic communities and people; confining Japanese Americans and illegal immigrants in internment camps subject to food shortages and substandard sanitation; economic exploitation of and fearmongering among migrant workers; the racial disparity of rates of mass incarceration; palpable class divisions and financial inequality caused by an ever-widening racial wealth gap across ethnic groups; the dismantling of unions and social organizations that laudably fought to bring a sense of dignity to working class and poor people; and hegemonic cultural attitudes and vocal intolerance of new Americans are just a few of the politically documented abuses that have prevented the country from actualizing as a single “nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all.”
An oft-celebrated aspect of its poetry, most audibly evoked in the poems of Walt Whitman, celebrates and idealizes the spirit of American democracy and its possibility, chiefly evidenced in its diversity of people and expansive landscapes. However, another important and equally principled tradition of poems written in the United States has long spoken to that space between the progressive idea of a country that promises equality, freedom, and liberty for its citizens and its long history of political injustice, systemic racism, oppression, and ethnic strife. In this regard, American poetry has served as a measure by which readers become acquainted with the difficulties and suffering of citizenship and how the United States might become a more perfect union. In this regard, because such poems, like the country itself, are born of a spirit of resistance and righteousness, tonally and thematically, they represent in literature the true spirit of what being an American means—they affirm founding values of freedom of speech and assembly in the promotion, pursuit, and expressions of a better tomorrow. In advancing a collective vision of what and who Americans are, these poems bear witness, challenge assumptions, and give substance to the country’s most elemental ideals of justice.
The poems gathered here document important historical struggles for dignity and justice; they praise political heroes; they express pride, frustration, and rage. They call for collective action and individual accountability, sometimes loudly yet always compellingly. They promote positive identities and self-esteem and make a claim for the sanctity of all humans. If you have any recommendations for poems to include in this collection, please contact us.
Freedom
Langston Hughes
Morning Song and Evening Walk
Sonia Sanchez
Grandfather
Michael S. Harper
jasper texas 1998
Lucille Clifton
- Sonia Sanchez
Climbing Milestone Mountain, August 22, 1937
Kenneth Rexroth
America
Allen Ginsberg
- Aria Aber
A New National Anthem
Ada Limón
The Lovers of the Poor
Gwendolyn Brooks
- Terrance Hayes
Rosa Parks
Nikki Giovanni
In Memoriam: Martin Luther King, Jr.
June Jordan
Frederick Douglass
Robert Hayden
Healing Gila
Lawson Fusao Inada
Something Whispered in the Shakuhachi
Garrett Hongo
Elliptical
Harryette Mullen
To Those Who Have Lost Everything
Francisco X. Alarcón
Reemergence of the Noose
Patricia Smith
What Kind of Times Are These
Adrienne Rich
If We Must Die
Claude McKay
Ballad of Birmingham
Dudley Randall
The Little Rock 9
Afaa Michael Weaver
City of Grace
Jake Adam York
Bullet Points
Jericho Brown
Power
Audre Lorde
- Franny Choi
[What is the sound ... ]
Dawn Lundy Martin
- Randall Horton
The Elements of San Joaquin
Gary Soto
Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100
Martín Espada
- Fatimah Asghar
- Reginald Dwayne Betts
- Thylias Moss
- Carmen Giménez
Like Brothers We Meet
George Moses Horton
If You Are Over Staying Woke
Morgan Parker
from The Book of the Dead: The Book of the Dead
Muriel Rukeyser
I Once Was a Child
Victoria Chang
Heart First Into This Ruin
Lizzy LeRud
Poetic Training
Ruth Graham
Poetry Betrays Whiteness
Lucas de Lima
Renaissance Woman
Danielle A. Jackson
Midnight at the Greatest Party of All Time
Morgan Jerkins
‘My Music Is Words’
Lavelle Porter
Go Back and Fetch It
Honorée Fanonne Jeffers
Elizabeth Alexander: “Race”
Stephanie Burt
The Negro Artist and the Racial Mountain
Langston Hughes
Nikki Giovanni: Selections
Sarah Ahmad
Mother of Black Studies
Kyla Marshell
Harryette Mullen: “Elliptical”
Austin Allen
Talk It Out
J. Howard Rosier
Gwendolyn Brooks at 100
The Editors
No Square Poet’s Job
Tony Rehagen
Lights and Shadows
Delaney Hall
Langston Hughes: “Harlem”
Scott Challener
June Jordan 101
Benjamin Voigt
Sticks and Stones and Words as Weapons
Opal Palmer Adisa
Dear Sister Outsider
Lavelle Porter
Experience, Experiment
Patricia Spears Jones
Ed Roberson 101
Benjamin Voigt
Gwendolyn Brooks: “kitchenette building”
Hannah Brooks-Motl
Gwendolyn Brooks: “kitchenette building”
Hannah Brooks-Motl
“Every Tool Became a Weapon”
Tod Marshall
- Meredith Stern
- Carl Phillips
Langston Hughes 101
Benjamin Voigt
American Service
Paisley Rekdal
The Voices of Hurricane Katrina, Part I
Abe Louise Young
Color Coded
Jaswinder Bolina
200 Years of Afro-American Poetry
Langston Hughes
Writing Like a White Guy
Jaswinder Bolina
Tokenism May Cause the Following Side Effects
Morgan Parker
- Meghan O’Rourke
- Carl Phillips
Worthy of Her Words
Kathleen Rooney
- Christina Pugh