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Monday, July 2, 2018

"It Was Summer Now and the Colored People Came Out Into the Sunshine" by Morgan Parker

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July 2, 2018
 

It Was Summer Now and the Colored People Came Out Into the Sunshine

 
Morgan Parker
Morgan Parker reads "It Was Summer Now and the Colored People Came Out Into the Sunshine."

About This Poem

 

"This is one of the last poems I wrote for my collection Magical Negro, which has an epigraph from Gertrude Stein's Three Lives, from which the poem title comes. Magical Negro deals largely with intergenerational connection and Black American iconography, and the gap between Angela Davis's teeth is one of the mascots that shows up in a few poems. I wanted this poem to be, in Glenn Ligon's words, 'negro sunshine'—a collective embrace and armoring. The last line of the poem wrote itself."
—Morgan Parker

 

Morgan Parker is the author of There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé (Tin House Books, 2017), Other People's Comfort Keeps Me Up at Night (Switchback Books, 2015), and Magical Negro, forthcoming from Tin House Books in 2019. She lives in Los Angeles.

 

Photo credit: Rachel Eliza Griffiths

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Poetry by Parker

 

"What Would Gwendolyn Brooks Do" by Parneshia Jones

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"Violence, I know you" by Khadijah Queen

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"For My People" by Margaret Walker

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July Guest Editor: Adrian Matejka

 

Thanks to Adrian Matejka, author of Map to the Stars (Penguin Press, 2017), who curated Poem-a-Day this month. Read more about Matejka and our guest editors for the year.

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