Poetry isn't something that I enjoy reading, as it's too subjective, and really just difficult. But, for me Gwendolyn Brooks' "Kitchenette Building" personifies the Black experience in America perfectly, so I'll share it with you guys. Something about the imagery reminds me so much of my childhood; not just in terms of my own family, but families around me as well.
I've spent four years in college around some of the most ambitious Black young-adults I've ever met, and I can't help but to think that we're all the result of the reality depicted in this poem: a generation of African-Americans struggling to maintain some sense of hope, despite the desperation of their circumstances, so that their children might make it a little further than they have.
Kitchenette Building
Gwendolyn Brooks
We are things of dry hours and the involuntary plan, Grayed in, and gray.
"Dream" mate, a giddy sound,
not strong Like "rent",
"feeding a wife",
"satisfying a man".
But could a dream sent up
through onion fumes
Its white and violet,
fight with fried potatoes
And yesterday's garbage ripening
in the hall,
Flutter, or sing an aria down
these rooms,
Even if we were willing to let it in,
Had time to warm it, keep it very clean,
Anticipate a message, let it begin?
Oh, and if you don't know Gwendolyn Brooks...you better ask
2 comments:
Love it!
"Number 5 is out of the bathroom" ... makes me think about "A Raisin in the sun"... how they had to share one bathroom with other tenants. The idea of shared space/ shared hope / shared struggle etc.rings hard. And of course there's the obvious recall of Hughes' "Dream Deferred" (Harlem). Haven't read a LOT of Brooks, but mean to buy a collection soon as I get through with this semester. Can't wait til' I'm done with what I HAVE to read, so i can read what i WANT to read.
This is perfect because it's a good story specially when I read a bout black people because they have made a great effort to fit in the society since time ago.m10m
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