The Furious Flower:
Black Poets Discuss Their Craft
By Meredith Hindley
"The time cracks into furious flower.
Lifts its face all unashamed.
And sways in wicked grace."
-Gwendolyn Brooks
"The Second Sermon on the Warplan"
These powerful lines of Gwendolyn Brooks provide the title
for a conference in late September that will bring noted black poets from
around the country to James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia.
One of the few conferences dedicated strictly to
African-American poetry, "Furious Flower" gathers many of the best-known
poets and scholars currently working in the field. Among the poets
appearing include Gwendolyn Brooks, to whom the conference is dedicated,
U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove, Amiri Baraka, Michael Harper, Sonia Sanchez,
Nikki Giovanni, Haki Madhubuti, and Louisiana Poet Laureate Pinkie Gordon
Lane. Critics attending include Langston Hughes biographer Arnold
Rampersad, Eleanor Traylor, Clyde Taylor, Lorenzo Thomas, and Joyce Ann
Joyce.
Both Nikki Giovanni and conference coordinator Joanne Gabbin are members
of the Virginia
Foundation for the Humanities and Public Policy, which has provided
funding for the conference.
Area high school students and members of the JMU
community will have opportunities to hear the poets read their own works,
attend Gwendolyn Brooks's and Rita Dove's keynote addresses, and some of
the larger discussion panels.
The "Furious Flower" conference explores the progress
of modern African-American poetry in a variety of ways. The folk
and cultural origins of the poetry and its relationship to other literary
movements will be examined, as well as interpretative approaches and application
of critical theories.
Gabbin and her committee have taken steps to see
that the contributions of the conference endure. Existing scholarship
will be supplemented through the publication of critical essays.
The September 29 to October 1 conference proceedings will be videotaped
and the poets interviewed for a documentary
produced by public television station WVPT.
The
conference and its materials will be also be a resource
for teachers and schools looking to incorporate African-American literature
into their curricula. "We hope, as a result of this conference,"
said Gabbin, "that professors here as well as statewide and in the region
will feel more comfortable with this material."
The conference specifically focuses on the developments
in African-American poetry since 1960. The period is seen as innovative
due to a broadening audience base and changes in the poetry itself.
The 1960s witnessed a rise in prominence of a number of black writers like
Ernest Gaines, Eldridge Cleaver, Sonia Sanchez, and Ishmael Reed.
Black poets, in particular, benefited from the expanded publishing of African-American
authors by both black and mainstream publishing houses. The expanded
printing of their works meant the poets' messages were increasingly heard
by black audiences and the general American public.
Gabbin chose the conference title, "Furious Flower," for its ability to
reflect what she sees as the two
sides of African-American poetry during the period. According
to Gabbin, "Furious" reflects the anger, struggle, and frequent militancy
present in the poetry. "Many of these poets have lent their voices
to the civil rights struggle and social change in this country," said Gabbin,
"and that had to be part of it-that's furious part." While a legacy
of calling for liberation exists within African-American poetry, the 1960s
prompted a more radical approach. Poetry became a political act advocating
social change through both the writing and reading of it. "The language
was often used as a weapon to bring about change," said Gabbin. As
the laws legalizing segregation fell away, the poets continued to confront
remaining social inequalities and misconceptions throughout the 1970s and
1980s.
Gabbin sees "flower" as referring to the beauty
of the verse itself. Whereas the politics of the 1960s were reflected
in the subject of the poems, the poets often broke with traditional poetic
structure. They
drew on conventional forms, like the sonnet, but more often chose to
use innovative forms reflecting the
poet's sense of freedom and risk. Poets experimented with blues
and altered ballad forms and used
jazz rhythms and improv techniques in new literary ways.
The "furious" and the "flower" joined together to prompt a revolution of
consciousness. The poetry, often calling for increased political
activism, drew on a strong oral tradition within African-American culture,
producing a renewed union of poetry and performance. "You had the
oral tradition prevailing over the printed page," said Gabbin. "Poetry
that wanted to inspire actions became a type of activism in itself."
The furious flowering of African-American poets
goes beyond the confines of a conference or a classroom. Gabbin believes
their voices are needed now. "We have to recognize that they helped
to foment a social revolution and they are needed again in the fight,"
she says. "Their voices are now being drowned out by the negative
rappers. They are the urban poets now, who are selling their
raps to the youth. Their raps carry the ideas that the poets
have been fighting against: violence
and sexism."

Pictured above (top to bottom): Gwendolyn Brooks, Rita Dove, Amiri Baraka, Nikki Giovanni, Haki Mudhubuti, Arnold Rampersad
--Reprinted from Humanities, September/October 1994, vol. 15, no. 5, pp. 28-9.