No Small Endeavor with Lee C. Camp

232: Joy Harjo: Poetry and the Pursuit of Justice, Truth, and the Common Good - Poetry Against the Dark

Oct 20, 2025
Joy Harjo, the acclaimed three-term U.S. Poet Laureate and a member of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, discusses the transformative power of poetry during chaotic times. She reflects on her personal history of loss and resilience, revealing how her heritage fuels her activism. Harjo emphasizes poetry as a ritual for healing and connection, highlighting its role in combating environmental and social injustice. With insights from her upcoming book, she illustrates how words can forge identity, foster community resilience, and illuminate the beauty of life amidst adversity.
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INSIGHT

Poetry As Ceremonial Language

  • Joy Harjo defines poetry as ceremonial language that shifts attention to deeper perceptions of connection.
  • Poetry refines witness work and uses oral resonance to open people's hearts and transform attention.
ANECDOTE

How Activism Sparked Her Poetry

  • Harjo began writing during Native rights movements after hearing community speeches about land and history.
  • That impulse turned into poetry as a means of healing and demanding justice.
INSIGHT

Representation Changed Her Poetic Vision

  • Hearing Native poets made poetry feel like it could speak in contemporary Native cadences and realities.
  • That presence transformed Harjo's sense of who could be a poet and what poetry could do.
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