Poets & Writers Theater
Every day we share a new clip of interest to creative writers—author readings, book trailers, publishing panels, craft talks, and more. So grab some popcorn, filter the theater tags by keyword or genre, and explore our sizable archive of literary videos.
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“To me all good poetry is experimental in some way,” says poet Susan Howe in this film about Emily Dickinson by poet and filmmaker Benita Raphan, filmed on location at the Morgan Library & Museum and the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. Raphan, a Guggenheim fellow known for her short experimental films, died at the age of fifty-eight on January 10, 2021.
Tags: Poetry | Cross-Genre | Benita Raphan | Susan Howe | Marta Werner | Emily Dickinson | video poem | Up to Astonishment | in memoriam -
Watch this trailer for the Cadence: Video Poetry Festival, presented by Northwest Film Forum and programmed in collaboration with Seattle author Chelsea Werner-Jatzke and artist Rana San. The annual festival is a series of screenings, workshops, and discussions on the genre of video poetry held during National Poetry Month in April. Read more about the Seattle literary scene in our Seattle City Guide written by E. J. Koh.
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“We hid in the trees and when we ran out of trees we hid in houses made out of trees and / when we / ran out of houses we hid in skyscrapers made out of steel and concrete...” This Motionpoems short film, featuring Jackson Holbert’s poem “Fable,” is directed by Žanete Skarule and stars Emma Bobrova Lourié.
Tags: Poetry | Jackson Holbert | Fable | Motionpoems | video poem | short film | Žanete Skarule -
“Butter lamp, incense stick, bees wax / votive, the occasion of poem, rites I enact…” In this video poem, Shin Yu Pai reimagines the traditional Wang Yeh Boat Burning Festival, a Taoist ritual, in the context of personal grief. Created in collaboration with filmmaker Scott Keva James, the short film was commissioned for the Ampersand Live showcase in Seattle. Pai is the final judge for Slippery Elm’s Deanna Tulley Multimedia Prize, which is open for submissions until September 30.
Tags: Poetry | Shin Yu Pai | video poem | short film | Cadence Video Poetry Festival -
Public Poetry has released five video prompts, including this one of a stone skipping across water, for their REELpoetry film contest. Submissions are open through November 2020.
Tags: Poetry | Public Poetry | video poem | writing prompt -
“You fill the pool with cough syrup, / and the hot tub with a thousand / hollowed-out cicada shells.” Noah Falck reads “Poem Excluding Modern Technology” from his new poetry collection, Exclusions (Tupelo Press, 2020), in this video poem directed by Kyle Marler with sound by Benjamin Jura.
Tags: Poetry | Noah Falck | Exclusions | Tupelo Press | 2020 | video poem -
“Life is short, and I’ve shortened mine / in a thousand delicious, ill-advised ways...” This Motionpoems short film by Anais LaRocca features Maggie Smith’s title poem from her third collection, Good Bones (Tupelo Press, 2017).
Tags: Poetry | Motionpoems | Maggie Smith | Good Bones | Tupelo Press | 2017 | video poem -
“We are // more vulnerable / by far // than is realized / by even our // least sung, / furthest flung, // and most / compromised.” This Motionpoems short film directed by Calum Macdiarmid features a poem written by Motionpoems founder Todd Boss, the first in a series that specifically speaks to a pandemic-ridden world which was commissioned by the University of Minnesota Medical School’s Center for the Art of Medicine.
Tags: Poetry | Todd Boss | Motionpoems | video poem | animation | On Lockdown | 2020 -
“It looked like a pancake, / but it was creation flattened out— / the fist of God on a head of wheat.” This Motionpoems short film, directed by Dan Sickles, features the titular poem from Melissa Studdard’s debut collection, I Ate the Cosmos for Breakfast (Saint Julian Press, 2014).
Tags: Poetry | Melissa Studdard | I Ate the Cosmos for Breakfast | Motionpoems | video poem | short film | Saint Julian Press | 2014 -
“Each winter a new storm bent on our shoreline and damage / bloomed wild. When the neighbors left, we stayed / watching the seawall recede stone by stone.” Meghann Plunkett’s poem “South County” is featured in this Motionpoems short film directed by Kenneth Kegley.
Tags: Poetry | Meghann Plunkett | South County | Motionpoems | video poem | short film -
“I’ve said so often that I’m hoarse with it: Kenya is cities, towns, as well as wilderness. See us.” Shailja Patel, author of Migritude (Kaya Press, 2010), contributes this video poem for Queer Check-Ins, a series curated by poet Franny Choi with support from the Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center, Kundiman, and Lambda Literary.
Tags: Poetry | Shailja Patel | Migritude | Kaya Press | 2010 | video poem | Queer Check-Ins | Smithsonian APA Center | Kundiman | Lambda Literary Foundation -
“It wasn’t fair that fish could see color, / and whales could not, but I was okay: I loved my new body. / I don’t know what kind of whale I was. In the ocean / there were no mirrors.” Emily Jungmin Yoon’s poem “The Transformation,” which appears in her debut collection, A Cruelty Special to Our Species (Ecco, 2018), has been adapted into a Motionpoems film directed by Malin Sandberg.
Tags: Poetry | The Transformation | Emily Jungmin Yoon | A Cruelty Special to Our Species | Ecco | 2018 | Motionpoems | video poem | short film -
“It is not what drove your body here like a stolen car. / why you abandoned it on this unreasonable ledge....” This Button Poetry video features sam sax’s poem “Gay Boys & the Bridges Who Love Them” from his second collection, Bury It (Wesleyan University Press, 2018), and is directed by Seth Moore and Cole Smothers with choreography by Matthew Bovee and Sarah Adam.
Tags: Poetry | sam sax | Gay Boys & the Bridges Who Love Them | Button Poetry | video poem | Bury It | Wesleyan University Press | 2018 | 2019 -
“I am hovering over a 1950s America: chrome fins, picnic tables, hydroelectric power.” In this installment of Joseph Fasano’s Unamuno Poem Project, which presents pairings of poem recitations in English and Spanish, Kathleen Flenniken’s poem “Angel” is read by Clarissa Watson in English and Javier O’Donnell reads his translation in Spanish.
Tags: Poetry | Kathleen Flenniken | video poem | Angel | Unamuno Poem Project | 2018 | Javier O'Donnell | Clarissa Watson | Joseph Fasano -
“Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, / the world offers itself to your imagination.” In this video poem, produced by We Are Wildness and Live Learn Evolve, Mary Oliver reads her classic poem “Wild Geese.” Devotions: The Selected Poems of Mary Oliver (Penguin Press, 2017) is featured in Page One in the November/December 2017 issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
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“In between, your mind is full of trees. / And it’s quite dark despite the moon.” This short film of Laura Kasischke’s poem “This Is Not a Fairytale” was created by Laurent Barthelemy and Shizuka Kusayanagi for Motionpoems. Kasischke’s most recent collection, Where Now (Copper Canyon Press, 2017), is longlisted for the 2017 National Book Award in poetry.
Tags: Poetry | Laura Kasischke | video poem | Motionpoems | This Is Not a Fairytale | Where Now | Copper Canyon Press | 2017 | National Book Award -
Watch "TENDER BLACK," a video poem by Melissa Broder. So Sad Today (Grand Central Publishing, 2016), a collection of essays by Broder, is featured in Page One in the March/April issue of Poets & Writers Magazine.
Tags: Page One | Grand Central Publishing | video poem | 2016 | March/April 2016 | So Sad Today | Melissa Broder | Poetry -
A short video poem by British poet, photographer, and artist David Alcock, produced at Plymouth College of Art in Devon, England.
Tags: David Alcock | Plymouth College of Art | video poem | Poetry