On the margins: : poetry that cuts through the city

Authors

Thay Gadelha (ed)
A Peagá (Bicha Poética) (ed)
Fran Nascimento (ed)

Keywords:

Poetry, Literature, Popular culture, Cultural diversity, Slam

Synopsis

For a long time, poetry was remembered as an art appropriated and monopolized by the economically and socially dominant classes, often used as a mere exercise in dilettantism. However, it is forgotten that even in these moments, poetry remained a phenomenon of popular resistance, whether in the verses of cordels or in popular declamations. And if poetry in Portuguese, especially Brazilian, has established itself on the world stage with big names in the most diverse currents, a new wave of poets has been gaining prominence with their verses created to be recited, and not just written. The metric is no longer the focus to the detriment of the message, which is not intended to merely entertain, but to scratch the public's eardrums, denouncing what is happening in the small alleys of the Brazilian outskirts. This book shows more than the talent of its authors, it brings denunciations in the form of verses, protests in the form of art. This is slam, a form of expression of the anxieties that hurt our society, in general, and our youth, in particular.

Chapters

  • Virgínia Oliveira
  • harangue
  • SLAM 2020
  • Leandriin
  • Bravely
  • Immortal Ideology
  • Mrs. Black
  • Anti-Racist
  • I am one, but I am not alone
  • Mc Barnabé
  • Beware of the thrush
  • October 12th
  • Malika
  • To the left
  • The street.
  • Mary Jheni
  • The weight of being a woman
  • Broken number zero
  • Sanoj
  • “On the Margins of the Margin”
  • ECO
  • Débora Caroline
  • SAVE THE SLAM! Or was it the slam that saved you?
  • CLERKS
  • Vetin
  • The theory of trickery poetry for Einstein
  • Socrates listened to the child
  • Layze Martins
  • It's time to resist!
  • It's something that white people don't go through

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Book cover On the margins: poetry that cuts through the city

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Published

March 1, 2022
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