History of ETHS Poetry Week
History of ETHS Poetry Week
Mrs. Chadwick (far left), Mrs. Brown-Powell (center-right), and Mrs. Iverson (far right) w/ETHS Poetry Week founder and retired ETHS Librarian Mrs. Nancy Figel (center left), circa 2018.
Poetry Week is an annual tradition at ETHS, going back to 2002 when ETHS Librarian Mrs. Nancy Figel initiated the program. Poetry Week activities are designed to inspire students as they listen to poet presenters, write poems in workshops, and perform their poems during the end-of-week Open Mic. Students in all grade levels participate each year in this positive, inclusive experience of poetry appreciation. Though we've made some changes over the past couple years, due first to COVID-19 and then to ETHS's switch to block scheduling, the tradition lives on!
Typically, Poetry Week kicks off with a day of guest poet performances in the Upstairs Theatre, followed by writers' workshops throughout the week lead by guest presenters, all culminating in our beloved all-school Open Mic in East Library.
Past performers and workshop presenters have included Adam Gottlieb, Darius Parker, Carlos Cortez, Jim Flanagan, Kevin Coval, José Olivarez, Idris Goodwin, Ross Gay, Parneshia Jones, Rachel Jemison Webster, Natalie Rose Richardson, Kweku Collins, Tony Trigilio, Dina Elenbogan, Kuumba Lynx, and former National Youth Poet Laureate Pat Frazier.
Poetry Week Open Mic, circa 2016
Poetry Week Open Mic, circa 2019
Writers' Workshop w/Darius Parker, circa 2022
Performance by José Olivarez, circa 2019
Performance by Pat Frazier, circa 2019
Writers' Workshop w/Kweku Collins, circa 2018
Writers' Workshop w/Adam Gottlieb, circa 2017
Writers' Workshop w/Adam Gottlieb, circa 2014
written by Nancy Figel, retired ETHS Librarian & Founder of ETHS Poetry Week
Jim Flanagan and the annual Poetry Week had a ten year embrace. With his New Jersey accent and his enthusiasm for the possibilities of every young person, Jim would come to Evanston each spring for the inspiration of the Evanston students and school members who would elevate all his hopes for the nation the students would help create. The students called writer and Ph.D. Jim “Doc”. He called them astounding, brave, talented, creative, forceful, honest. In his view, the students who wrote, who read, and the teachers, school workers and visitors who came together for the events of each week rumbled with the force of poetry's best element: honest beauty. Upon his return to New Jersey each year, until his sudden death in 2012, Jim sent notes, encouraging letters and ideas that always showed how much he admired the students and how impatient he was for the coming of the next Poetry Week.
Jim Flanagan
Carlos Cortez
In many ways, Carlos Cortez came to Poetry Week as the eternal sophomore, the confident, creative thinker who had more trust in his own principles than in any old traditions. Though using a cane, the hair of his flowing mustache gray, he had mischief and boldness in his poetry and in the wood and linoleum block prints that flowed inexpensively from his home press onto the walls of East Library and many Evanston homes. From the top of his battered, broad-brimmed hat to the toes of whatever shoes he favored that day, Carlos Cortez was a believer in justice, something that he would help instill in what the students heard and in what they wrote. The students made his eyes sparkle, while they made the years drop from him as, together, they took up the Poetry Week task of explaining a complicated world that could be changed by thought, courage and art.