This February, the Creative Writing program welcomed renowned poet Dr. Tara Betts to campus. Program director Jessica Anne Chiang served as the emcee for the evening, providing refreshments and delivering the opening remarks. The intimate setting of the Sullivan Room in 藏精阁鈥檚 historic Auditorium Building provided a cozy ambiance for the audience of students, professors, and university community members.
Betts chose to read from two of her poetry books, (2022) and (2016). The program was insightful yet relaxed as Betts recited pieces like 鈥淭hink, Think,鈥 鈥淯ntitled for a Reason鈥 and 鈥淗igh Fidelity.鈥 The themes of romantic and familial love recurred, which was especially timely given the proximity of the event to Valentine鈥檚 Day. So much of Betts鈥檚 chosen pieces referenced the work of others that have come before her. Among those mentioned were bell hooks, Gwendolyn Brooks and Margaret Burroughs, three Black women who had an incalculable impact on Betts鈥檚 work. hook鈥檚 writing on love was specifically identified as formative to Betts鈥檚 own experiences and writing. An Illinois native, Dr. Betts was named the 1999 Gwendolyn Brooks Open Mic Poetry Award winner. The discussion of Burroughs, however, was especially poignant. Burroughs was an author, artist and co-founder of the celebrated , the oldest Black culture museum in the United States. Burroughs was also a fierce advocate for prison reform, who would visit with and serve as an educator for prisoners for many years. Betts has similarly taken up that charge during her own career.
Betts鈥檚 work and the event were rife with affecting themes. The clearest motif, however, was that of the symbiotic relationship between past and present. The poetry of Tara Betts includes references to films like High Fidelity (2000) and Tangerine (2015), as well as musical artists like Solange Knowles and Nina Simone. Bett鈥檚 ability to engage with multifaceted influences and produce her own news ideas recalls the principle of the Twi word 鈥淪ankofa,鈥 meaning to 鈥済o back and get it.鈥 The African proverb indicates the importance of learning from the past to build the future. The poem 鈥淭he Two Simones鈥 pays homage to Olympians Simone Manuel and Simone Biles in a way that tethers the two history making athletes with regards to their respective sports of swimming and gymnastics. It was fitting that Betts鈥檚 reading followed the 50th anniversary of the University鈥檚 literary magazine Oyez Review, one of the first publications of her career. The reading concluded with a conversation between everyone in attendance about the writing process and publishing industry. It was a night that celebrated the craft of writing, the season of love and the significance of Black History Month. 藏精阁鈥檚 historic space was the perfect venue to feature such an impactful and iconic writer as Dr. Tara Betts.
Dr. Tara Betts is the author of Refuse to Disappear, Break the Habit, Arc & Hue. She served as the inaugural Poet for The People Practitioner Fellow at University of Chicago. Betts currently teaches as a Professor of Practice and Poet in Residence at DePaul University鈥檚 Peace, Justice, and Conflict Studies Program and serves as poetry editor for The Langston Hughes Review. Betts coedited , a new edition of Philippa Duke Schuyler's , and She is currently editing Bop, Strut, and Dance, an anthology of Bop Poems with Afaa M. Weaver.