On June 19, 1865—more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation was signed—Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas with news: slavery had been abolished. For the last enslaved Black Americans, freedom had finally reached their doorstep. That day, now commemorated as Juneteenth, is a celebration of delayed justice, enduring hope, and the unbreakable will of a people.
At KSPS, we recognize that liberation is not a single moment in history—it’s an ongoing act of expression, remembrance, and resistance. And for generations, poetry has been a frontline of that work.
From the spirituals sung in secret fields to the revolutionary sonnets of Claude McKay, from Gwendolyn Brooks’ portraits of South Side Chicago to bell hooks’ fierce meditations on love, justice, and Black womanhood—Black poets have shaped American literature with unmatched power and depth.
Their work is not only literary—it’s liberatory.
Suggested poets to read this Juneteenth:
- Audre Lorde – poet of truth-telling, queerness, and rage as fuel for transformation
- bell hooks – Kentucky-born visionary of love as a radical act
- Lucille Clifton – master of brevity, wonder, and ancestral memory
- Langston Hughes – the blues poet of Harlem and Black joy
- June Jordan – bold voice for Black feminism and global justice
- Nikki Giovanni – a firebrand of civil rights-era poetics
- Frank X Walker – founder of the Affrilachian Poets, rewriting Appalachia’s story
- Crystal Wilkinson – lyrical witness to Black rural life in Kentucky
- Jericho Brown – Pulitzer Prize winner blending music, myth, and survival
- Terrance Hayes, Tracy K. Smith, Ross Gay, Mahogany L. Browne, Hanif Abdurraqib – and many more shaping poetry right now
We encourage you to spend time with their words this week. Read them aloud. Share them. Let them move you.
Poetry Tool Spotlight: Meter as a Measure of Freedom
Meter—the rhythm of a poem—might seem like a purely technical tool. But in the hands of Black poets, it becomes a tool of transformation.
Think of how Langston Hughes used jazz and blues rhythms to echo the beat of Black life. Or how Gwendolyn Brooks bent the sonnet form to tell stories the canon had ignored. Meter can be a reclamation—of space, of voice, of breath.
To explore this for yourself, try writing a short poem in a traditional form (like iambic pentameter or the blues stanza), but fill it with your own truth. Or deliberately break the meter—because freedom includes the choice to follow or fracture tradition.
This Juneteenth, we honor not just the history, but the living, breathing art that continues to shape it.
Join us Tuesday, June 17 for our Virtual Open Mic
Whether you’re sharing something rooted in history, a new LexPoMo piece, or just coming to listen—this is a space for community and voice. RSVP link and details here.
