What childhood experiences with language informed your relationship with poetry and life? How did you first find your voice?
The post Ms. Muse: A Short History of Falling in Love with Words, and Becoming a Girl with a Voice appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>How do you redeem a woman’s worst nightmare lived—or at least one of them? How do you give a mute, silenced or dead woman a voice? These are a few of the questions answered by Melissa Studdard’s poems.
"after I died / I put my clothes back on. / Like women do. / When everything has been taken."
The post Ms. Muse: Melissa Studdard on the Power of Poetry to Create the World We Want appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>Our poetry and stories—our songs—bring us together, remind and ignite us, and make us strong.
The post Ms. Muse: The Coffee Must Be Excellent and We Must Dance—to Defy Russia appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Ms. Muse: Cherokee Chief Wilma Mankiller’s Lost Poems appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Ms. Muse: ‘Only Freeish’ in America appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post The Return of Ms. Muse—Because We Need Righteous, Riotous Feminist Poetry Now More Than Ever appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>Descended from lifetimes of being forced to forget, Chicana/Latinx poet Marisol Baca works to remember what was lost long ago, writing stories that she grew up hearing from the women in her family.
The post Ms. Muse: Marisol Baca on Writing the Stories that Raised Her, Feminism and Surviving 2020 appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Ms. Muse: Purvi Shah Resists Erasure and Rewrites History with Feminist Poetry appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Ms. Muse: On Political Poetry in the Trump Era—and a Call for Poems of Resistance appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Ms. Muse: Feminist Love Poems appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
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