Three poets stride across the stage of a small auditorium in Louisville, Kentucky,
spinning word pictures of South Carolina grandmothers, the sounds of Mississippi Delta
girlhood, and the visions of Martin Luther King Jr., envisioned as rapper King Doctah. The
images Nikky Finney, Kelly Norman Ellis, and Frank X. Walker conjure of God, family, and rural life give the event the spirit of a Baptist revival service. At the
end of his final selection, Walker roars "Can I get an Amen?" One
hundred-fifty people respond, pushing the poems through the roof.
Some of the bluegrass
is black
enough to know
that being colored and all
is generally lost
somewhere between
the dukes of hazzard
and the beverly hillbillies
but
if you think
makin shine from corn
is as hard as kentucky coal
imagine being
an Affrilachian
poet
from "Affrilachia," by Frank X. Walker
In 1991, Frank X. Walker attended an event in which four white Kentucky authors and one
African-American writer, South Carolina native Nikky Finney, read from their works.
Previously billed as an evening of "The Best of Appalachian Writing," the
events name had been changed to "The Best of Southern Writing" to
accommodate Finney.
"Why werent African-American writers in Kentucky represented?" Walker
remembers asking. The Websters Dictionary he consulted later in the evening defined
Appalachians as "white residents from the mountains." "It meant I
couldnt be a great Appalachian writer if I wasnt white," Walker said.
Out of need came inventiona birthing, a sacred naming ceremony for him and other
black artists from Appalachia. They became the Affrilachian Poets. "There is a power
in naming something, naming yourself when the appropriate word is not there. Black writers
in Kentucky were grateful for the word, it was something that could hold usa vessel
we could sail across the sea in," says Finney, one of the groups founders and a
member of the University of Kentucky English faculty.
Soon Walkers community of writers at the University of Kentucky adopted the name.
Members would steal "poetry moments" by holding impromptu critique sessions in
elevators of the Martin Luther King Cultural Center, turning off the power to share work
and get feedback. Its the groups intense sense of community that continues to
be a sustaining element today. "I think there has been no other writing group since
the days of the Harlem Renaissance that is as connected as we are; we really are connected
by spirit," says Crystal Wilkinson, whose short story collection Blackberries,
Blackberries was published by The Toby Press this summer.
THOSE WHO RESPONDED with hallelujahs to Walker, Finney, and Ellis at the Louisville
reading felt part of their poetry; their words about childhood and family reunions
reflected a common experience. Walker, now director of the Kentucky Governors School
for the Arts, receives similar reactions to his recent poetry collection, Affrilachia,
published by Old Cove Press. "The highest compliment has been readers who say,
I dont like poetry, I dont read books, but I liked Affrilachia.
Its accessible; its not what they expected. It covers common denominators:
social justice, community, identity, place."
Making poetry and art accessible to all audiences is central to the groups
mission. Its 13 members hold writing workshops in underserved rural schools in the
mountains of eastern Kentucky with Appalachian and Affrilachian students. "The power
of the Affrilachian Poets in these communities shows that no one person owns the term
artist. Going into it, I am an ambassador for the power of poetry," says Finney.
Walker has connected with readers in venues that go beyond typical book tour audiences.
He recently teamed up with a gospel choir to perform for inmates in a state prison. He
presented faith-laced pieces, including his poem "Amazing Grace," between hymn
verses sung by the choir. Walker also was sponsored by the Alabama Writers Forum to
work with adolescents held in the states juvenile detention centers who had been
pulled out of the regular population as part of an anti-violence program. Walker said that
group was one of his more rewarding audiences: "They have recognized they can
rehabilitate, given the chance to write, to explore how they feel, and to think."
Walker hopes to re-create the workshops at other detention centers.
Finney, whose poetry covers issues of race, gender, and domestic abuse, sees art as a
means to an end. "There is power in defining poetry as a political tool. Its a
reminder of being alive and brings people together." Finney reminds us, in
"South Africa: When A Woman Is A Rock," that being alive can be a struggle:
"They always put their hands on the women first/They do this for a living/They do
it to make a point/cutting away the heart/leaves a hole/big enough for bullets to crawl
through/They strike the gentle angry women first/and when they do/They do not know/They
are touching rock
." And "A nation is never conquered/until the hearts of
its women/are on the ground."
Walker also writes of social and political concerns and has been criticized for letting
too much of his politics seep into his writing. "Affrilachia was a good effort
with good intentions," one critic wrote, "but Walkers politics got in the
way of the poetics." Walker took it in stride. "It was a compliment. Politics is
part of the world and nothing is outside the bounds of poetry."
RECENT DAYS HAVE brought increasing success and recognition. Walker, Ellis, and Finney
are featured as up and coming poets in Spirit and Flame: An Anthology of Contemporary
African-American Poetry. Wilkinson and Walker have published their first collections
of work this year and Finney has completed her third collection, "The World Is
Round," and is searching for a publisher. Ellis is on the faculty of the MFA program
in Creative Writing at Chicago State University, the first of its kind at a historically
black university.
The Affrilachian Poets also are the subject of an upcoming PBS documentary film, Coal
Black Voices, scheduled for release in November, and an accompanying spoken-word CD
featuring the work of all current members: Bernard Clay, Ricardo Nizario Colon, Miysan T.
Crosswhite, Mitch Douglas, Kelly Norman Ellis, Nikky Finney, Lerin Kol, Jude McPherson,
Daundra Scisney-Givens, Shanna Smith, Paul Taylor, Frank X. Walker, and Crystal Wilkinson.
The Affrilachian name hasnt served to separate them from other artists or their
communities but has made them visible as part of the cultural and artistic landscape of
the Appalachian region. As they approach their 10th anniversary, the Affrilachian Poets
have, in Walkers words, "existed to make visible/to create a sense of
place/that had not existed/for us/for any unwealthy common/people of color/now claiming
the dirt they were born in."
Elizabeth Newberry is editorial assistant of Sojourners. Affrilachia is
available from Old Cove Press, or nyokah@earthlink.net. Blackberries, Blackberries
is available from The Toby Press at www.tobypress.com or 800-810-7191. For more
information about Walker or the film Coal Black Voices, visit
www.mwg.org/openstudio/walker/.
Read other articles by:
Newberry, Elizabeth
|
Subscribe to Sojourners today at a special introductory price and save $10 off the basic rate! Click here for details.
WE WANT TO HEAR from you! Click here to share your views. Or write to "Letters," Sojourners, 3333 14th St. NW, Suite 200, Washington DC 20010; fax (202) 328-8757. Please include your name, address, and daytime phone number. Letters may be edited for space and clarity.
|
|
 |
Read other articles by:
Newberry, Elizabeth
|