Last year, the first “100 Thousand Poets for Change” event took place on September 24. In 2011, there were 650 events in 550 cities — including multiple events in Cairo, Sharjah, Alexandria, and Fes.
What sort of “change” is 100TPC talking about? That’s up to local organizers. Founders Michael Rothernberg and Terri Carrion write on the 100TPC website that they just want local events to envision change “within the guidelines of peace and sustainability.”
Rothenberg said that, after the ‘60s and ‘70s, Anglo poetry was divested of its central role in cultural dialogue and debate. But now, he believed, self esteem is returning to these other poetries, and “the sense of the poet’s role in society.”
Of course, recent events have also caused poets to reflect on what it means to be “political,” and how “political poetry” can in some ways shackle poets to a particular aesthetic and a particular line of thought. In any event, it will be an interesting night to be out among the poets.
