No Small Endeavor with Lee C. Camp

232: Unabridged Interview: Joy Harjo

Oct 24, 2025
Joy Harjo, a three-term U.S. Poet Laureate and member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, discusses the critical role of poetry in times of crisis. She shares her journey of finding voice through art and activism, influenced by the trauma of her family's history. Harjo emphasizes poetry as a ritual and a means of healing, connecting personal struggles to broader societal issues. She also reflects on the importance of recognizing Native voices and the power of community in resilience, urging poetry to be seen as a vital tool for transformation.
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INSIGHT

Poetry As Ceremonial Witness

  • Joy Harjo says poetry uses ceremonial language to tap the heart and open deeper perceptions of connection.
  • Poetry functions as witness and resonance that refines history into attention and listening.
ANECDOTE

Becoming A Poet During Activism

  • Harjo began writing poetry while involved in Native rights movements and listening to community speakers confronting extraction companies.
  • Her early poems grew from witnessing land-based testimony and the need for collective healing and justice.
INSIGHT

Hearing Native Voices Changed Her View

  • Hearing Native poets at university revealed poetry could reflect contemporary Native life and cadence in English.
  • That exposure transformed Harjo's view of poetry from distant 'old white guys' to immediate, place-based voice.
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