Author Archives: Guest writer

I / Ice

Anna Maria Hong, Philadelphia

IMG_1258

It is in the nature of ice to expand, unlike other substances that shrink when transforming from liquid to solid. Ice will shatter a glass container, make metal bulge and pop, if you don’t keep its physical properties in mind when handling it or placing it in a vessel, where it will be shaped and temporarily constrained before reverting back to water, back to vapor. Water wants to travel. Ice wants to grow.

Water, the element of emotion and life itself, is not like the other players. Because of its strange characteristics, ice is a specialized subject of inquiry: some physicists devote their careers to studying just ice. Ice is unique, a substance unto itself.

The ice sculpture embodying the words “The American Dream” is being installed on Independence Mall, melting as it’s being erected, letter by letter, even though each letter rests on its own pedestal of dry ice. The weather app says it’s 97 degrees, and it feels like 99% humidity.

Video of ice melting

When I first heard of this installation, I thought about how much I like ice, how beautiful it is, how consoling and delightful on a blazing summer day like today or as snow in a winter blizzard. I also first thought that the metaphor was a bit on point.

The American Dream melting before our eyes: we know this, we’ve known it for a long, long time. Journalists, climate scientists, economists, and many other writers and scholars have documented the numerous ways in which the idea of equal opportunity has been liquefied in recent times. For some of us, our entire lives have been and will be saturated with a hobbled, holey, insulting, or irrelevant version of the notion that is the dream.

But then, melting and evaporation don’t equal disappearance. The solid subject de-materializes in only one dimension and mostly in just one physical sense—vision, our most overrated and exhausted path of perception—as what was once seemingly solid before our eyes transforms into something else—water then vapor.

As water, the subject will travel downward through wood, grass, dirt, bones, colonies, roots, and worms, feeding flora and fauna along the way. As vapor, the subject will travel upward through the atmosphere, the sky, forming fog and clouds, the most democratic of nature’s spectacular displays, as virtually anyone can see clouds at any time in any place—on land or at sea, in the bowl of a canyon, at ground level or elevation.

It takes hundreds of billions of tiny droplets to make one cloud, which appears corporeal but embodies ephemerality, movement, change.

Some of the molecules will make their way back to being ice, presumably not formed into words or slogans again, but you never know.

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Ninguna Sanción

Josh Adler, Philadelphia

Leaky emails scream, “Ninguna sanción, sin asistencia!” to bigotry, to persecution.

The roiling heat hands out third party revolutions like popsicles.

Now it’s just spring cleaning all over again.

We stopped collecting the dove so long ago, the dove is dust face-down, speaking, “mano a la boca,” to the unjust dust.

WHAT DOVE?!

Dove-Tattoo-3D

The dove that’s too fast to fly.

The hanging dove reminder.

The branches’ penchant love dove.

The empty outline dove from our youth.

The dove that cannot be cracked.

The spring dove, the summer dove, the poster dove above us.

The dove you cannot miss.

 

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NOW

Julia Lopez, Philadelphia

Can I, Can We                                                                                                             Live In Peace, Now                                                                                                  Now that I am here                                                                                         Pushing through                                                                                                      Mal-functioning Words                                                                                       Broken Sounds                                                                                                Damaged Syllables                                                                                         Exclusion, illusion                                                                                                    Mis-Conception                                                                                                      False Impression                                                                                              Pressing Down On My Head                                                                                     On my Face                                                                                                                 My Father’s Face                                                                                                           Your Face                                                                                                                    Our Human Face

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where America turns,

Josh Adler, Philadelphia

Election Confessions

On the way to the place where America turns, flags bear crosses and confederacies. Signs spiel ungodly surrender, while lady liberty crops a spiky eye towards her state’s unwavering way.

These rando pickup places (between the dead flag poles, and melting magazines crouched over mailboxes like Sunday hats) are my fave.

At the doorway it’s time for a delivery. Are the neighbors unpacking or packing? They’re backing in, but will they deliver? Who’s ship is this?

Around the back of Tasker St. the summer jobs are fists awaiting repair from solid air. The air is packing heat all the way to the crash.

Officers stand on every corner. Every. Dreaming to watch from a stoop, or hear the twinklings of sanguine speeches after dark. Backpackers launch across empty lots spelled out by the bouquet graffiti. Their steps hold the wind like illegible confetti. Stranded?

The bus kneels, rises, kneels and rises. It’s a ship. It’s a ride. It’s a sale. Convention. It’s eyes down. It’s sanitation. It’s a right turn.

It’s a girl wavering on a steely bike in the heat.

Legs churning, churning. She is an auxiliary liberty pedaling through liberty independent of virtue’s mall. A Philly dream shop in search of shade. She is a left turn, a triple take. She is a sign, a building. She peddles. The hemline of what’s to come.

 

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Unfin

Julie Patton, Cleveland

Peaceavist Vinie Burrow’s

“We Will Not Be Silent”

T shirt

in anglish & arabic

moans on my chest

soon to be packed

like glaciers

_me ican ream

am

mo  m’

eyes

halve a talk with

all these blocks of ice

sound alike

Omer…

cheeks

I can’t

separate races of

let t..t…terse

wicked

itch of the west

caps

gowns

gaps

cross

air

inscribed

in water

watching us

me lt

 

 

 

 

 

 

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The Me In Meaning

Mary Barrett, Cleveland

So I do not know what the

American Dream

means

 

for me

for woman

for black

for poor

for half

 

I have half meaning

Not even

I have 1/8 meaning

No

 

I have no meaning

I do not know what it means

for white

for man

 

I do not know

All I know is

it does not give me a meaning

I can live up to

I tried looking up my name in the dictionary

but remembered I did not name myself

 

So I’m given “it has no meaning”

I am the it

I am the no

I am the undefined

I am what is not here for me

 

I make meaning for myself with my heteroglot

and why my block does not look or sound like yours

 

I sit in a neighborhood that I am not native to

and speak my native tongue

just to get your reaction

then try to understad it

 

American Dream

is a sentence fragment

American can not embody who I am

or where I’m from

and I keep waking up before my dreams end

so I’m left with questions my makers

don’t have the answers to

 

I try to piece

me

meaning, meaning

to-geth-er

to get her closer to me

 

I do not know what to dream

I do not know how to be

 

So, maybe American and dream

just do not go together

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(F) RICAN DREAM

(F) rican Dream: ambient, ice, voice, one-fingered digital piano, tiny music box, toy mbira
where's the dream Janice A. Lowe

where’s the dream
Janice A. Lowe

 Janice A. Lowe, Cleveland
(F) RICAN DREAM

cat calls

living wall lynch law

open carry “woof of the heritage of the West”-Baldwin

 I.

re                                 who’s South?              hollow in ground

crime

 

I am                            Quechua talk

Made

 

Rare

Rican                           or                                Yucatan

 

Mare                           sleepwalk

Med

 

Ream

Air                               re-dis-member the Americas and in-betweens

 

Name

Rain                            borders                                  positioning

 

Dam

Merde                         Vancouver                              self of Central

 

Rice

Cane

 

Rad                             altitude

Ma

 

Red

Cam                            dreamed directions

 

Cram

Aim

 

Rim                             four

II.

i-tears

flossy summer rain

re-crash

 

Cracked bed bottom

Webby

Trapped blap

Blip perfect gone

Scope of scooped sun

A leg-cicle

Body of M

Fracture

Backwards

Our LEG ad libs

Tubes

BRidge

Teeth

Fall

Like mountains

 

 

 

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American Dream I

Daniel Gray-Kontar, Cleveland

I.

So when I think about the American Dream, as I’ve been doing since the Republican National Convention has arrived into Cleveland, I’m forced to think about all of the discourse that has emerged in the past several weeks. So much of it has been about Donald Trump, Hillary Clinton, and so many of the personalities representing the two political parties vying for political power in our country. And while the arrival of RNC has inspired so much of my thinking, and is, in fact, the catalyst for this writing and reflection, I’m forced to remember that the American Dream has very little to do with any of these personalities. It has little to do, in fact, with political parties. The American Dream is about the beautiful battle of narratives, which crystalize into ideologies. It is about the fact that The American Dream is about one’s capacity to speak the truth of one’s personal and collective narrative without fear. It is, further, about the capacity to speak one’s own truth, to associate with others who share your truth, and to engage in discussion and debate with others who do not share your truth, your backstory, your understanding of what it means to be, of what it means to engage in the struggle for self-actualization and self-determination. This is The American Dream. And too, the constant questioning of whether or not the American Dream is being realized is a part of the American Dream.

And so … As I sit in front of an ice sculpture of the words “AMERICAN DREAM” melting in the sun – a sculpture which is designed to force us to question our personal understanding of its meaning – I realize that as long as we live in a society in which we are able to create works of art that force us to question who and what we are, why we are, how we are, and where we are going – if we are allowed to freely question, to freely answer, and to freely act upon our reflections within the context of acting in ways that are not harmful to our shared Republic — we are living the Dream. The moment that for any of us, we are no longer able to engage in this kind of relentless critique, then we are no longer engaged in the pursuit or actualization of that dream. And so we must question, not only what is The American Dream, but who amongst us is not allowed to live it; why are they not allowed to live it, and how we must respond and react in a way that upholds the meaning of our collective Dream as human beings who call themselves (or do not, by choice) American.

 

II.

The Dream

 

Many are inside, but do not see.

See, but do not speak.

Speak, but do not know.

Know, but do not feel.

Feel, but do not touch.

Touch, but do not reach.

Reach, but do not hear.

Hear, but do not listen.

Listen, but are outsiders

(or so, they have been told).

 

Many are inside, but do not see …

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