Spectrum II
A Poetic R-evolution
by
Book Details
About the Book
Poems come to me from many dimensions—personal, family, a friend, my community, or a world happening near or far from southern Indiana. Words grip me emotionally—as an empathy that I feel with someone else or out of my own soul. I may ponder the topic for a few minutes, or a few days, but I must write. It’s like a “tune I must play” but in poetic verse. I grab pen and paper or rush to the computer. My poetry falls in three areas. Some are “protests” of societal problems throughout the world that I cannot be comfortable with: poverty, war, unruly political institutions, lack of resources for education and health, pollution of the earth’s resources and a vast media /consumerism enterprise that sucks up our freedoms (to name a few). Secondly, I look at myself. Through topics of nature, introspection, love, and family I see changes I must make before I can help others. Thirdly, I see trends in the youth—how they band together in “online communities”, attack travesties of justice around the globe, form “lifestyle” businesses, study alternative medicine and politics, want sustainability and the right use of energy. They look not just at the “green” of the dollar but how the earth can become more balanced. I feel poetry, like music and the arts, leads us to what we “share” and “have in common.”
About the Author
Rachel Wright is an adjunct professor of education in a community college. She has been published in magazines and academic journals both in reference to education and the “study of intentional communities.” She resides in a rural communal village of 150 people which was founded in 1966. She is an award-winning artist and the founder of PoART, a program linking poetry and art. She is a strong advocate of midwifery, alternative education, and childcare for working mothers. She spends her extra curriculars in wine-making, writing, music, baking, art (oils and acrylics), and other “do it yourself” projects. Mother of six, grandmother of five, she resides in southern Indiana.