Black History

Celebrate and explore the rich tradition of African American poetry through essays on literary milestones, intersections of music, poetry and art, and profiles and poems of historical and contemporary poets who continue to pioneer new ground while keeping an eye on the past.
Schools & Movements

Schools & Movements

Harlem Renaissance
No place embodied the new aesthetic more than Harlem, home to a thriving artistic scene of literary magazines like The Crisis, cafes, jazz clubs, and scores of reading venues.

Schools & Movements

Negritude
The movement is marked by its rejection of European colonization and its role in the African diaspora.

Schools & Movements

Black Arts
Artists within the movement sought to create politically engaged work that explored the African American cultural and historical experience.

Schools & Movements

Jazz Poetry
Writing about jazz poetry is, as they say, like dancing about architecture.

Schools & Movements

Slam
Often highly politicized, drawing upon racial, economic, and gender injustices as well as current events for subject manner.

Schools & Movements

Dark Room Collective
It was the sustaining practice of writing in community just as much as the activism of building a community-based reading series for writers of color.

Great Books

Great Anthologies

Vintage Book of African American Poetry  
A vast narration of struggle, love, race, and redemption through the work of fifty poets.

Groundbreaking Books

The Bean Eaters
by Gwendolyn Brooks

Written during the early years of the Civil Rights movement, during which the Brooks's interest in social issues deepened and found expression in her work.

Groundbreaking Books

American Journal
by Robert Hayden

Hayden's poems, with their expansive connotations, transcend sociological definition. They are irreducible in their themes...

Groundbreaking Books

The Weary Blues
by Langston Hughes

The poems progress at a self-assured and lyrical pace—partly because Hughes expected them to be performed with musical accompaniment in the famous Harlem clubs of that era.

For the Classroom

Lesson Plan: Voice
Students participate in a series of learning activities employing interconnectivity between poems used and core texts to explore poetry as social commentary.
Poetic Forms

Blues Poem
A blues poem typically takes on themes such as struggle, despair, and sex.

The Bop
Not unlike the Shakespearean sonnet in trajectory, the Bop is a form of poetic argument consisting of three stanzas.

From the Poetry Store


The Color of Love: An Artist's Book of Poetry and Passion The Color of Love: An Artist's Book of Poetry and Passion

First created more than a decade ago as an extremely limited, silk-screened edition, The Color of Love is a lavish gift for lovers everywhere.

$85.00 | Order Now



Tiepolo's Hound Tiepolo's Hound
By Derek Walcott

With twenty-six of Derek Walcott's own paintings, Tiepolo's Hound is a spiritual biography and a history in verse.

$30.00 | Order Now



Domestic Work Domestic Work
By Natasha Trethewey

Domestic Work, the first book by Pulitzer Prize-winner Natasha Trethewey, was selected by Rita Dove for the 1999 Cave Canem Poetry Prize.

$13.00 | Order Now

Featured Poets

Claude McKay
At the age of twenty, McKay published a book of verse called Songs of Jamaica, recording his impressions of black life in Jamaica in dialect, and his various poetic achievements helped set the tone for the Harlem Renaissance.

Natasha Tretheway
Born in Gulfport, Mississippi, Tretheway is the author of Native Guard, which received the 2007 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, Bellocq's Ophelia, and Domestic Work, which also won several awards.

Derek Walcott
Poet and playwright Derek Walcott was born in the West Indies. He has received numerous honors for his work, including the Nobel Prize for Literature and the Queen's Medal for Poetry.

Rita Dove
A former Poet Laureate of the United States, Dove is the author of several collections including Thomas and Beulah, which won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry, and most recently American Smooth.

Featured Poems

Negro Love Song
by Paul Laurence Dunbar
Seen my lady home las' night...

American History
by Michael S. Harper
Those four black girls blown up...

Derrick Poem (The Lost World)
by Terrance Hayes
I take my $, buy a pair of very bright kicks for the game...

My First Memory (of Librarians)
by Nikki Giovanni
This is my first memory:...

For the Confederate Dead
by Kevin Young
These are the last days...
Featured Audio

The Negro Speaks of Rivers Hear it!
by Langston Hughes
I've known rivers...

We Real Cool Hear it!
by Gwendolyn Brooks
We real cool. We...

homage to my hips (audio only) Hear it!
by Lucille Clifton
these hips are big hips...

All Their Stanzas Look Alike (audio only) Hear it!
by Thomas Sayers Ellis
All their fences...

Featured Essays

Women of the Harlem Renaissance
by Anthony Walton
In the time of the Harlem Renaissance, race and gender often hindered the building of artistic careers.

Tracy K. Smith in Conversation
Known for the mysterious but utterly lucid quality of her poems, Smith writes a history that is sub-rosa yet fully within her vision.

Sekou Sundiata: Defying Labels
Blues, jazz, funk, and Afro-Caribbean percussion surround the soulful voice of Harlem-born poet Sekou Sundiata on his recordings, The Blue Oneness of Dreams and Longstoryshort.

On Black Male Poetics
by Afaa M. Weaver

Despite their different choices, Hughes and Hayden had one thing in common. They loved living the life of the poet.

Recordings for Sale


Robert Hayden CD
By Robert Hayden

Given in the midst of his service as Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress.

$12.00 | Order Now



Lucille Clifton & Gwendolyn Brooks CD
By Lucille Clifton

Captures all the conviviality between the poets and their warm interaction with the audience.

$12.00 | Order Now



Marilyn Hacker & June Jordan CD
By June Jordan

A phenomenal pairing of two poets who compliment each other with their very distinct formal concerns.

$17.00 | Order Now


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