7
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
📍 Noticed
Let the Poets Govern: A Declaration of Freedom
by Camonghne Felix
Sponsored
Synopsis
In this part-memoir, part-manifesto at the intersection of personal grief and political resistance, an acclaimed poet and policy strategist leans on Black radical literary traditions to reimagine freedom through rupture, rhythm, and refusal.Over the past decade, Camonghne Felix has ...
In this part-memoir, part-manifesto at the intersection of personal grief and political resistance, an acclaimed poet and policy strategist leans on Black radical literary traditions to reimagine freedom through rupture, rhythm, and refusal.
Over the past decade, Camonghne Felix has been at the center of American politics, working in strategy, communications, and as a speechwriter. Throughout it all, she has maintained her unwavering belief in language’s foundational revolutionary potential, outside of its deployment for legislative and political ends. In this groundbreaking work of nonfiction, she argues that Black radical poetic traditions can model a new ethical code and overcome entrenched structures of patriarchy and paternalism, inventing a new form that examines the historical and legislative, and the personal and poetic.
Felix draws on stories from her life in campaigns and the decisions she has had to preparing speeches for candidates, responding to harassment, recruiting staff. She recounts her moving personal history—accompanying her mother, a lawyer, to court, and her father, a participant in the Grenadian revolution of 1983, to protests—as well as her coming-of-age being schooled in a wider tradition of Black radical thinkers, from Gwendolyn Brooks to Audre Lorde.
Let the Poets Govern encourages us to hold ourselves to the standards of our highest ideals and embraces our shared humanity.
Over the past decade, Camonghne Felix has been at the center of American politics, working in strategy, communications, and as a speechwriter. Throughout it all, she has maintained her unwavering belief in language’s foundational revolutionary potential, outside of its deployment for legislative and political ends. In this groundbreaking work of nonfiction, she argues that Black radical poetic traditions can model a new ethical code and overcome entrenched structures of patriarchy and paternalism, inventing a new form that examines the historical and legislative, and the personal and poetic.
Felix draws on stories from her life in campaigns and the decisions she has had to preparing speeches for candidates, responding to harassment, recruiting staff. She recounts her moving personal history—accompanying her mother, a lawyer, to court, and her father, a participant in the Grenadian revolution of 1983, to protests—as well as her coming-of-age being schooled in a wider tradition of Black radical thinkers, from Gwendolyn Brooks to Audre Lorde.
Let the Poets Govern encourages us to hold ourselves to the standards of our highest ideals and embraces our shared humanity.
You May Also Like
A Court of Thorns and Roses Hardcover Box Set (A Court of Thorns and Roses, #1-4)
Sarah J. Maas
Rosyjscy Poeci: Aleksander Puszkin, Iosif Brodski, Anna Achmatowa, Borys Pasternak, Iwan Bunin, W Odzimierz Wysocki, Siergiej Jesienin
R.D.O. Wikipedia
Tender Cruelty (Dark Olympus Book 9)
Katee Robert
Tesla Meets Physics
Franklin Hasty
The Missing Pages
Alyson Richman
Mindset: The New Psychology of Success
Carol S. Dweck
Memoir Picks
View All
When Breath Becomes Air
Paul Kalanithi
The Flower Bearers: A Memoir
Rachel Eliza Griffiths
That's a Great Question I'd Love to Tell You
Elyse Myers
Out of the Woods: A Girl a Killer and a Lifelong Struggle to Find the Way Home
Gregg Olsen
This American Woman: A One-in-a-Billion Memoir
Zarna Garg
I Regret Almost Everything
Keith McNally