Kate Daniels' Poetry Reading
Published on November 10, 2004
By
jtatter
In
I was delighted to see three of you at the poetry reading yesterday. It is obvious that our study of poetry in class has influenced your choices of intellectual and cultural events to attend. You are making good connections between your classroom learning and your extra-curricular education.
My strongest response to Kate Daniels' poems was to her first two, in which she admitted how marginally involved and aware she was of political and social issues (the Vietnam War, the Civil Rights Movement) during her adolescent years. Instead of feeling guilty about not standing up for what was right or getting involved in protest movements, she has used her poems to raise her voice now. Her retrospective vision is powerful, and since as a society we are now facing some of the same issues in a different form, her words have value for us. Like Ms. Daniels, I am in my early 50s, and I was only marginally involved in the political and social issues that rocked the 60s and 70s. In fact, I often held opinions that I now reject. Instead of wanting to delete my past, however, Ms. Daniels has encouraged me to embrace it and use it as I feel the cycle of history turning around again.
What affected you most deeply in Ms. Daniels' poetry reading, and why do you suppose it did?