Nate Marshall and Demetrius Amparan: "Lost Count: A Love Story"

Last week was the 10th annual finals of Louder than a Bomb (LTAB), the Chicago Teen Poetry Festival. Across the country, thousands of young poets, emcees, and storytellers are using their words as weapons for transformation and social change. Case in point, this poem from Nate Marshall and Demetrius Amparan, former LTAB champions who went on to perform at the Brave New Voices national youth poetry slam. As  in many cities, youth violence in Chicago has reached epidemic proportions. Nate and Demetrius show us the personal stories behind the numbers, and ask us what will it take to call this crisis what it really is.

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EpOgTH uytgrsnhvrjr, by Anonymous
Simply beautiful. by Anonymous

CURRENT ISSUE: FEBRUARY 2012

February 2012

Progressive Matt

The Koch Brothers Conspire to Buy the White House

The Spoken Word and Progressive Politics

Howard Zinn, the beloved people's historian and longtime Progressive columnist who died on January 27, 2010, was a brilliant storyteller. He told the stories "not of the heroes and achievements of traditional history, but of all those people who were the victims of those achievements, who suffered silently or fought back magnificently": the labor radicals, the early feminists, the anti-war soldiers. Zinn also believed in people telling their own stories in their own voices. He believed in the power of artists to reshape the larger political narrative towards social justice and solidarity.

Today, a new generation of artists and activists has emerged, using their words as weapons for radical discourse and political empowerment. Coming out of the era of Reaganomics and gentrification, in the traditions of Amiri Baraka and Lenny Bruce, a movement of spoken word artists is speaking up. They combine elements of free verse, hip-hop, stand-up comedy, and soap-box preaching, but connecting them all is a diverse, democratic art form that demands participation. Spoken word is about the call and response, re-definition and self-determination, the street corner and Capitol Hill.

In this series, we are going to present a range of spoken word artists, musicians, and storytellers, all of whom are using their voices to rewrite the American narrative -- one story, many people at a time. As Howard would say, "Let the people speak."

— Josh Healey
Spoken Word Editor for The Progressive