Take a Stand Art Against Hate


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About The Book

<p><em>Take a Stand: Art Against Hate A Raven Chronicles Anthology</em> edited by Seattle-based writers Anna Balint Phoebe Bosche and Thomas Hubbard contains poems stories and images from 117 writers 53 artists 69 illustrations divided into five fluid and intersecting sections: <em>Legacies</em> <em>We Are Here</em> <em>Why?</em> <em>Evidence</em> and <em>Resistance</em>. We begin with <em>Legacies</em> because the current increased climate of hate in this country didn’t begin with the 2016 election and to find its roots we must look to U.S. history. The work represents a wide range of proactively humanitarian and nonviolent stances that poets artists and activists have taken in response to the many troubles afflicting us in this era. We can regard <em>Take a Stand: Art Against Hate</em> as a print-form peace march an ongoing campaign for justice for all of the struggles embodied in these writings and depicted in the photos and artwork included here. This is a deeply democratic anthology—standing alongside nationally prominent voices such as Jericho Brown Lucille Clifton Tess Gallagher Ilya Kaminsky Dunya Mikhail Marge Piercy and Danez Smith are luminaries renowned in the Pacific Northwest region and beyond such as Kathleen Alcalá Gary Copeland Lilley Claudia Castro Luna Melissa Kwasny Priscilla Long Tiffany Midge Carolyne Wright and Gail Tremblay. This anthology comes at a critical time in our nation’s cultural discourse surrounding intersections of identity resistance and looking at the past to forge a path forward. This collection spans form tone and theme without feeling cluttered; you find yourself reading something new while experiencing the same emotions many of us have come to find all too familiar. Thought-provoking and heart-wrenching this collection—which boasts the words of Danez Smith and the art of Lawrence Paul Yuxweluptun and Alfred Arreguin—flows seamlessly from poetry to visual art creating an anthology that is not only a commanding and introspective read but a necessary one.</p>
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