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Twelve Poems to Help Celebrate Pride Month
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Twelve Poems to Help Celebrate Pride Month
As June draws to a close, spend some time with these joyful, powerful expressions of queer experience and identity…
By Holly Kybett Smith
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Published on June 24, 2024
Photo by Jason Leung [via Unsplash]
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Photo by Jason Leung [via Unsplash]
We’re in the midst of Pride Month, and with it comes an opportunity to celebrate the creativity of the LGBTQ+ community’s many, many poets. Being part of the queer community can mean facing numerous challenges—especially in parts of the world where there are no legal protections (yet)—but it is also an honour: one that connects you to a large and powerful legacy of art, expression, passion, and love.
This month I’ve selected twelve poems that radiate queer joy and encapsulate different facets of queer experience… although they are just the tip of a very large iceberg, and if you go digging, you will find much, much more. Whether you’re an ally to the community, hoping to learn from our perspectives, or you fall somewhere under the queer umbrella yourself, I hope you find something here that resonates with you.
“Jesus at the Gay Bar” by Jay Hulme
He’s here in the midst of it –right at the centre of the dance floor,robes hitched up to His kneesto make it easy to spin…
The first poem I’ve selected is by transgender performance poet Jay Hulme, best known for his work as an LGBTQ+ activist and writer in Christian spaces (notably old churches, which he explores and writes about in loving detail on Substack). “Jesus at the Gay Bar”acknowledges the common belief amongst religious communities that queerness is something one must cure, and gently but firmly assures the reader otherwise.
“Fragment” by Sappho
I said: ‘Go with my blessing if you goAlways remembering what we did. To meYou have meant everything, as you well know…’
It wouldn’t be a list of queer poetry without acknowledging Sappho: the poetess whose legacy birthed the terms “Sapphic” and “Lesbian” as ways of talking about women who love women. The above excerpt—one of many suffused with gay undertones—is translated by Aaron Poochigan. If you’re interested in exploring a unique angle on the ancient poet and the symbol she has become in modern culture, lesbian fashion historian Eleanor Medhurst talks further about Sappho’s significance in this article.
“i love you to the moon &” by Chen Chen
not back, let’s not come back, let’s go by the speed of queer zest & stay up there & get ourselves a little moon cottage (so pretty), then start a moon garden…
This gorgeously romantic poem was included in Poem-a-Day in 2021, and breathlessly captures the whirlwind of a new love. Chen Chen’s writing is a joy, frequently exploring queerness as a theme.
“Warming Her Pearls” by Carol Ann Duffy
Next to my own skin, her pearls. My mistressbids me wear them, warm them, until eveningwhen I’ll brush her hair. At six, I place themround her cool, white throat. All day I think of her…
As a lesbian myself, with a proclivity for historical fiction, Warming Her Pearls is probably one of my all-time favourite queer poems, so I had to give it a spot on this list. In elegant verse, Carol Ann Duffy—the first female poet, first Scottish-born poet, and first openly lesbian poet to be appointed Poet Laureate—tells a story of forbidden and subtle romance between the maid and mistress of a historical house, which feels as though it could have slipped from between the pages of a Sarah Waters novel.
“Statue of David with Top Surgery Scars” by Devin S. Turk
I see the smooth dip in surfacewhere pectorals meet a ribcageand I envision into existence two scarsperhaps still fresh with stitch marks…
This playful poem re-imagines Michelangelo’s David—a symbol of high art and traditional beauty in the Western world—as an emblem of transness: this figure is, after all, a man that had to be created, chiselled free, in much the same way that a trans man carves himself into the world. There is something fiercely beautiful about that, isn’t there?
“Romance of Possible Contrasts” by Alison Rumfitt
They met in a no-good gay nightclub in Kemptownand the Sea danced with the Forestto Madonna, twirling around each other, laughingup to the top where the smoking area was…
This sixth poem makes the ordinary extraordinary, weaving a fantastical love story between two forces of nature who happen to meet for the first time in a Brighton nightclub. Rumfitt’s use of magical realism here elevates the mundane to match the heady sensations evoked from queer connection.
“Home Wrecker” by Ocean Vuong
And this is how we danced: with our mothers’white dresses spilling from our feet, late Augustturning our hands dark red. And this is how we loved:a fifth of vodka and an afternoon in the attic, your fingerssweeping though my hair—my hair a wildfire…
Perhaps best known for his debut novel, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous, Ocean Vuong writes lyrically in poetry and prose. “Home Wrecker,” whichappears in his poetry collection, Night Sky With Exit Wounds, tells a tantalising and dangerous queer love story.
“Seeking Trans Ancestors in Old Provincial Graveyards” by Jay Hulme
Every day breaks like a man,and every night falls like a woman,and the dawn arises and the moonin the daytime hangs silent and awkward,like the rest who’ve never belonged…
Yes, Jay Hulme gets two spots on my list. Sue me, he’s fantastic! This poem—which appears with “Jesus at the Gay Bar”in Jay’s collection, The Backwater Sermons—follows its narrator through the winding path of a graveyard, musing on the unknown and unspoken queer history that came before.
“The Moon Is Trans” by Joshua Jennifer Espinoza
From this moment forward, the moon is trans.You don’t get to write about the moon anymore unless you respect that.You don’t get to talk to the moon anymore unless you use her correct pronouns.You don’t get to send men to the moon anymore unless their job isto bow down before her and apologize for the sins of the earth…
This gorgeous, emotive poem takes the moon and personifies her as a trans woman. (“Scientists theorize the moon was once a part of the earth that broke off when another planet struck it. Eve came from Adam’s rib.” Who can argue with that logic?) In the writing of it, Espinoza expresses her feelings about womanhood and personhood with powerful clarity.
“Poem For My Love” by June Jordan
How do we come to be here next to each other in the nightWhere are the stars that show us to our love inevitable…
June Jordan was a prolific and highly-acclaimed Jamaican American poet, who identified herself within her poetry as bisexual, even when the label was stigmatised. This tender, romantic poem is one of many in her oeuvre.
“If You’re Staying, I’ll Stay Too” by Meg Day
I know a girl like youwho used to be a thing she isn’t anymore but hasn’t changed at all.Whose orbit didn’t circle straight—whose size & distance never quiteseemed right—but no one cared til now…
Just as Espinoza reaches into space to express a her identity with The Moon Is Trans, Meg Day chooses Pluto as a locus for expressing theirs as a genderqueer poet. No two celestial bodies are the same, even within the bounds of their categorisations, and isn’t that a wonderful thing?
“Boy in a Stolen Evening Gown” by Saeed Jones
In this field of thistle, I am the improbablelady. How I wear the word: sequined weightsnagging my saunter into overgrown grass, blondesplit-end blades. I waltz in an acre of bad wigs.
This final poem by Saeed Jones uses vivid, tactile imagery to play with gender and sexuality. Elegant and fanciful, deliberately strange and yet simultaneously earnest, each word paints a picture of hope, desire, and possibility.
As always, please do feel free to share your own favourite queer poems in the comments. (And if this article has left you yearning to read more by queer writers, why not check out this interview with three of this year’s finalists for the Lambda Literary Award for LGBTQ+ speculative fiction?)[end-mark]
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