Write Your Block

Write Your Block

Mapping the urban center through poems, 1 neighborhood at a time

I've ever been drawn to the notion of the poet as cartographer, a maker of maps.

—Frank Sherlock, Philadelphia'southward 2014-2015 Poet Laureate

What do you run into when y'all walk out your front door? What would you like to meet? What does your block hateful to you? These are the questions former poet-in-main Frank Sherlock asked of the urban center when he created Write Your Block as a way for Philadelphians to explore their neighborhoods via poetry, charting—and sharing—their communities through their own words. The result: A map of Philadelphia that is non rivers and parks and streets, merely ideas and memories and dreams for neighborhoods through the people who know them all-time.

Similar Simone in Mantua, in May 2015: "This place is the coldest / dampest place I've / ever been." And Tiana A., in Germantown: "My block is nice, more than twice. / I see wires. What practise I admire?" And Gianna, in North Philly: "Plants   people   rocks   playgrounds   forest   Robert's mobile car / Swigs   vans   steps   sun   coin trees   clouds   fries and bars / Church   leaves   grass lights   buildings   benches   lights   poles / Baby   gates   paper   pants   coats   flowers   stores   rope from a roof."

Write Your Block was originally inspired by The City Real and Imagined (Heretical Texts/Factory Schoolhouse, 2010), a collaborative piece of work from Sherlock and CAConrad, in which the ii poets wandered the metropolis, using poetry to map their path and articulate their interaction with urban space. In Sherlock's two years every bit Poet Laureate, he led poetry workshops and inspired others, in Mantua and North Philly and Germantown.

Originally a projection with the metropolis's Office of Arts, Civilisation and the Creative Economy, Write Your Block lives on at The Citizen. We invite you to submit your own verse form about your own neighborhood, and to read the portraits of the communities around you, from the people who live in that location. View the printed collection of some poems from Write Your Block; some will be posted on The Citizen in the weeks to come up.

You tin can likewise download a toolkit for organizing your own neighborhood workshop.

Write Your Block Poems

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Source: https://thephiladelphiacitizen.org/write-your-block/

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