On a frigid Valentine’s Day in Ithaca, Jasmine Reid invited warm faces and eager ears to come to Buffalo Street Books in Ithaca for a reading and release party of her new chapbook “Deus Ex Nigrum,” which translates to “God out of the Black.”
Before going into poetry, Reid thought that she would pursue a career in fiction writing. But, she said she soon found herself in workshops that were very white and “whitewashing.”
Reid said that she quickly realized that she did not want to be in those types of spaces. She had a pivotal experience in college when she participated in a spoken word team that consisted of all queer people of color.
This helped strengthen her love of poetry, she said.
From working alongside other women of color and queer people of color, Reid said she knew that these were the types of environments that would provide her with the biggest sense of community. In her MFA program at Cornell, her cohort is also all women of color.
Reid said the racially and ethnically diverse poetry workshops and retreats she has gone on have given her incredible encouragement.
“I knew I didn’t want to be somewhere where I was the only person of color. Much less so the only woman of color. So, I try to surround myself with folks I consider to be kin and family in that sense.”
Historically, poetry writers and teachers have not been racially or ethnically diverse. However, the poetry industry today is increasingly embracing more people of color and people who identify as LGBTQ+. According to the National Endowment for the Arts, poetry is even growing the most in its readership out of all other literary genres.
Reid acknowledges that though the poetry industry is evolving in terms of inclusivity, there is still a fear among some that this renaissance and “tokenization phase” is only momentary.
Reid thinks otherwise.
“I don’t think we’re going to let it pass. I think we’re too powerful and there’s too much of a desire from ourselves and from people like us to have our words.”