Vox Populi

A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 20,000 daily subscribers and over 8,000 archived posts.

Floyd Collins: The Eternal Pearl 

David Rigsbee’s version of Dante’s Paradiso captures memorably the dulce stil nuovo (“sweet new style”) adopted by thirteenth century Italian poets from the troubadours of Provence.

February 4, 2024 · 3 Comments

GEORGE YANCY: How Can Philosophy Speak to a World in Crisis? The Answer May Lie in Our Bodies

Whether we are ill, depressed, anxious, suffering from injustice, a refugee, incarcerated — having contact with beauty can lift our spirits, rehumanizing us.

January 15, 2024 · 6 Comments

Vox Populi: Most Popular Posts of 2023

We now have approximately 18,000 email subscribers, one third outside the United States, and our posts are picked up by social media where they often go viral. For example, Zeina Azzam’s poem Write My Name, published in November 2023, has been translated into Arabic, Spanish, French, and Japanese, as well as other languages, and read by millions. 

December 26, 2023 · 8 Comments

Michael Simms: Writing Prompt # 8 – Start a file of your favorite short passages

Whenever I need inspiration, I go back to a collection of my favorite poems and prose passages that I keep in an electronic file on my desktop. They consistently remind me why I love writing and reading.

December 10, 2023 · 24 Comments

Traditional Poems from Pre-Modern South India

It was the very first night,
and the young girl showed surprising skill
in the arts of love

December 1, 2023 · 7 Comments

Stuart Sheppard: Rebellious Spirits

Some historical events seem so fantastical that they sound like myths when retold, while others are so intrinsic to our nature that they could be today’s news, and actually help us understand our contemporaneous existence more deeply.

November 24, 2023 · 4 Comments

David Kirby: Golden Gate by Clarence Major (Review)

A new world is rising, and for the most part these stories read like field reports about earthlings to an alien race.

November 22, 2023 · 2 Comments

Tina Kakadelis: “Killers of the Flower Moon” – Film Review

The film is adapted from a 2017 book of the same name by David Grann, and it chronicles the murders of Osage people in the 1920s in order to steal their oil wealth.

November 9, 2023 · 6 Comments

D.W. Fenza: Why the Department of English Needs a Drastic Renovation

The English department had fashioned itself after the kind of revelation the English Department could no longer provide. —from the poem “Berkley Hills Living” by Jessica Laser ~ The English … Continue reading

November 5, 2023 · 11 Comments

Baron Wormser: Five Easy Pieces

Bobby has the dis-ease that is bred in the easy-going yet overbearing ways of his nation.

October 29, 2023 · 8 Comments

David Kirby: The Questions That Matter Most by Jane Smiley (review)

The point [Smiley] misses is that the best writing often contains an element of the weird, the bizarre, the outlandish, the alienating. Call it wildness, if you will…

October 10, 2023 · 9 Comments

Baron Wormser: The Dark Sky | Politics and Its Discontents

It may be that the love that lives within us cannot be turned toward something as large and seemingly abstract as the earth. But the earth isn’t abstract at all. Each moment is local and real and is always a place where we might begin.

October 8, 2023 · 7 Comments

Michael Simms: Rhythm Benders | The Musicality of American Poetry

A poem is rooted in the rhythms of pulse, breath and movement.

October 6, 2023 · 10 Comments

Katie Kapurch: Why ‘Barbie’ and ‘The Little Mermaid’ made 2023 the dead girl summer

These dead girls offer insights about living. Embracing death’s inevitability brings some freedom, as well as access to truths about time and the natural world.

September 14, 2023 · 2 Comments

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