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On Radical Equality: Jim Papworth’s “Seven Songs of Creation”

Tyler    May 4, 2015 May 9, 2019    Comments Off on On Radical Equality: Jim Papworth’s “Seven Songs of Creation”
"Mother Creator" by Jamie Clark

“Mother Creator” by Jamie Clark

Jim Papworth’s “The Seven Songs of Creation”

Post 4/31 in my A Mother Here reading series.

(Click/tap here to read the poem.)

Poem:

http://fireinthepasture.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/4-Papworth_The-Seven-Songs-of-Creation.mp3
(Direct link to audio file.)

Commentary:

http://fireinthepasture.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/4-Comment-on-Papworth_The-Seven-Songs-of-Creation.mp3
(Direct link to audio file.)


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“This My Only Prayer to You”: Emma Jay’s “O”
Mothering a Motherless House: Calvin Olsen’s “Veil”

Fire in the Pasture: 21st Century Mormon Poets

. . . the bounty of [this] anthology reminded me of Christ’s generosity in feeding the five thousand. Christ took real substances—a little bread, two small fish—and he created from them . . . food that nourished the people and made it possible for them to return to their lives both physically and spiritually renewed. Poets take matter (language, emotion, thought, experience) and make of that matter a new creation, a work of art that did not exist before the poet organized it, a work that has the potential (each poet hopes) to nourish—to make readers see what they did not see before, to offer insight, to create empathy, to provoke thought, or to express beauty, soundness, depth. To offer abundance in place of scarcity.

–Susan Elizabeth Howe

Read more about the anthology »

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