Articles
The
Eagle
American University's Independent Student Voice
March
3, 2005
Teen
poet slams opponents
War of words fought in Kay
By BLAIR PAYNE
Thirteen-year-old
Rhia Hardman couldn't stop smiling after she found out she won third
place at Wednesday's Poetry Slam in Kay Spiritual Life Center, beating
out not only three of her fellow classmates, but also graduate and
undergraduate students from AU.
Hardman and
her classmates made the trek from Charles Hart Middle School in
Southeast D.C. to recite their own words on subjects ranging from
death to the planet Saturn.
Four AU undergraduate
and graduate students also performed poetry, while self-dubbed "Slam
Master" Nicki Miller, an AU staff member, presided.
The Poetry Slam
is an annual event held in conjunction with literature professor
Betty T. Bennett's Experience of Poetry class. Contestants face
off against one another to show off their lyrical talents, while
five audience members judge their performances.
"I think
it's really important that this event is in conjunction with a General
Education class," Bennett said. "It introduces students
to new poetry."
The slam also
gives young teenagers the chance to deliver their poetry to an audience.
Each year, students from Charles Hart Middle School participate
in the competition. The school is the only inner-city public school
in the country that produces a literature magazine, and students
are strongly encouraged to voice their artistic side.
And they did.
The small but engaged audience clapped and cheered on Shaquiel Jenkins,
Raekala Middleton, Deandre Britten and Hardman as they recited their
poems, and booed and hissed each time a judge gave one of them a
low score.
For the four
students, the actual competition was not as important as the opportunity
to express themselves. Jenkins tackled the subject of being a confused
teenager quite well, and Middleton's poem about herself was not
only funny, but was even more powerful because of her spirited delivery
and extroverted personality.
Middleton was
not the only student who performed energetically. AU student John
Breckman's poem on Whole Foods and its New Yorker-reading yuppies
and their expensive tastes drew laughs from the audience, as did
his reflection on chess games between him and family members. His
readings earned him first place in the slam.
AU alumnus Derrick
Brown's haiku series on late-night pizza in Adams Morgan, which
he described as "Nastycrap.com" and "piss-colored
cheese," was also a hit with the audience, placing him second.
Nothing could
beat the attitudes of the Charles Hart students, however. When asked
by an audience member what inspired people so young to write poetry,
it did not take Jenkins long to think of his answer.
"My poems
come from life experiences," he said. "They come from
turning points in my life."
Jenkins, who
aspires to be a Supreme Court justice, and the rest of his classmates
will, one would hope, have more turning points that allow them to
express themselves as they did Wednesday.
The D.C. Creative
Writing Workshop, the program based out of Charles Hart Middle School,
will host a reading by other students March 16 at 7 p.m. at Karibu
Books at The Mall at Prince George's. For more information, visit
www.dccww.org.
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