PodcastsArteThe Poetry Magazine Podcast

The Poetry Magazine Podcast

Poetry Foundation
The Poetry Magazine Podcast
Último episódio

111 episódios

  • The Poetry Magazine Podcast

    Wake, Butterfly: What Else Is True? with Marie Howe

    26/05/2026 | 15min
    In the final episode of season 2, Marie Howe invites listeners to find what’s praisable. 
    Matsuo Bashō wrote:
    Wake, butterfly— 
    it's late, we've miles 
    to go together.
    Poetry magazine presents Wake, Butterfly, a series of intimate portraits that invite listeners to keep creating. The series is produced by Rachel James with sound design by Axel Kacoutié.
    Here’s an edited version of Marie Howe’s prompt:
    Consider one of the stories of your life that feels fixed, and allow yourself to gaze around that story to find something else in that story—even if the story is a painful one—that's praisable.
    “Attic" from What the Living Do by Marie Howe. Copyright © 1998 by Marie Howe. Used by permission of W. W. Norton & Company, Inc.

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  • The Poetry Magazine Podcast

    Wake, Butterfly: Exorcise the Grief with Dawn Lundy Martin

    19/05/2026 | 9min
    Dawn Lundy Martin invites listeners to notice where the grief resides, then let it go.
    Matsuo Bashō wrote:
    Wake, butterfly—
    it’s late, we’ve miles
    to go together.
    Poetry magazine presents Wake, Butterfly, a series of intimate portraits that invite listeners to keep creating. The series is produced by Rachel James with sound design by Axel Kacoutié.
    Here’s an edited version of Dawn Lundy Martin’s prompt:
    Exercise grief from your body by first noticing where it resides. Sit outside in the sun for ten minutes in silent meditation with the phrase “let go” being a return thought if any other language enters. Focus on your breath and on where your body feels grief—not what produced the grief. After, write a list of those parts of the body. Then write for ten minutes toward that vibrational place of beautiful, wet longing. Draft a poem that brings together the parts of the body where grief is held and the language of hunger and unrestrained longing. 
     
    Credits: Anne Sexton, “The Truth the Dead Know” from The Complete Poems of Anne Sexton (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1981). Copyright © 1981 by Linda Gray Sexton and Loring Conant, Jr. Reprinted with the permission of Sterling Lord Literistic, Inc.

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  • The Poetry Magazine Podcast

    Wake, Butterfly: Find the Water with Manny Loley

    12/05/2026 | 13min
    Manny Loley invites listeners to make an offering.
    Matsuo Bashō wrote:
    Wake, butterfly— 
    it’s late, we’ve miles 
    to go together.
    Poetry magazine presents Wake, Butterfly, a series of intimate portraits that invite listeners to keep creating. The series is produced by Rachel James with sound design by Axel Kacoutié.
    _____
    Here’s an edited version of Manny Loley’s prompt:
    Create a poem in four steps. First: Find a body of water to sit with and listen. Let it connect with the water inside of you. And let the sound that it makes work on your body and your mind and your heart. Second: Build your relationship with the water. Listen for what the water has awakened inside of you. What do you feel? Where do you feel it in your body? What stories are brought to the surface? Third: Follow the reverberations. Write down some of your thoughts, your feelings, your memories. Don't worry about spelling or grammar, or about making things sound writerly or whether they make sense or not. Fourth: Make an offering to the water. Share what the water gave life to in the form of your poem. Touch the water and give thanks.
    _____
    The poem “REMEMBERING A CRESCENT MOON/DAH YIITA BEE HANIIH” that Loley reads in the episode was originally published by Arkansas International and can be read in full on their website.

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  • The Poetry Magazine Podcast

    Wake, Butterfly: Here Is What I Did with My Body with Maggie Nelson

    05/05/2026 | 11min
    Maggie Nelson invites listeners to productively disassociate.
    Matsuo Bashō wrote:
    Wake, butterfly— 
    it's late, we've miles 
    to go together.
    Poetry magazine presents Wake, Butterfly, a series of intimate portraits that invite listeners to keep creating. The series is produced by Rachel James with sound design by Axel Kacoutié.
    _____
    Here’s an edited version of Maggie Nelson’s prompt:
    Write on a piece of paper: “Here is what I did with my body one day:” and tell us an anecdote that the Roland Barthes passage “The Rib Chop” inspired in you from your own body and life. 
    (You can read the text of the passage by expanding the transcript for the episode.)

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  • The Poetry Magazine Podcast

    Wake, Butterfly: Black Swallowtail with Nick Makoha

    28/04/2026 | 8min
    Nick Makoha invites listeners to build a cocoon, then break free.
    Matsuo Bashō wrote:
    Wake, butterfly— 
    it's late, we've miles 
    to go together.

    Poetry magazine presents Wake, Butterfly, a series of intimate portraits that invite listeners to keep creating. The series is produced by Rachel James with sound design by Axel Kacoutié.
    _____
    Here’s an edited version of Nick Makoha’s prompt:
    Part one: the cocoon of shelter.
    What is the cocoon you are entering? A place of tension? Of hiding? Of gestation? Or of potential? What are you protecting yourself from or preparing yourself for? Can you name the walls of this cocoon? What are they made of? Silk? Sound? Guilt? Waiting? Where do you feel most alive in that space? 
    Part two: unfolding into the restlessness. 
    Now comes the pressure, the restless, irreversible becoming: what begins to stir inside the cocoon. There will be chaos. Begin writing from that internal movement—this place just before the break. Let that force build in your body. Notice where it lives. Behind your ribs? In your hands? Just under the skin? What is the chaos? Let it press against the limits of the cocoon.
    Part three: speak back. 
    Break out of the cocoon, become the butterfly. Ask yourself: what part of me wants to speak back? What voice have I silenced? Return to a version of yourself that you might have thought was lost. Let this be your poem.
    Part four: speak the piece aloud. 
    Notice how your breath feels. If you're by yourself, read what you have written to yourself aloud. If you're in a community, share it with them, and do it as a chorus of voices.

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Sobre The Poetry Magazine Podcast
The Poetry Magazine Podcast takes listeners on an audio journey into and beyond the pages of Poetry. Hear poets share the surprises, confusions, and desires that keep them writing. Produced by Rachel James.
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