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Minneapolis - Pattern/Constraint/Sound: Poetic Form Laboratory
Instructor: Douglas Kearney
Applications Open: July 1 - August 18
Workshop Sessions: September - November, 6-9 PM
Workshop Location & Reading: Loft Literary Center
Cave Canem’s workshops are rare opportunities for poets of all experience levels to work with and learn directly from accomplished poets in Cave Canem’s network. Limited to small enrollment groups, these multiple-session workshops offer rigorous instruction, careful critique, and an introduction to the work of influential poets. Workshops are tuition-free and free to apply.
About Pattern/Constraint/Sound: Poetic Form Laboratory
Not just about writing sonnets, this workshop about forms offers writers the opportunity to more deeply engage questions of structure, sound, and innovation. Rigorous and playful, Pattern/Constraint/Sound helps writers take such questions up, exploring and then exploding forms inside and out. Poets will develop their prosodic chops, fortifying not only their writing but also their understanding of why we have certain habits, blocks, and technical mojos. Poets will try their hands at forms old and new from around the globe, develop their own new forms, and experiment with writing formats outside of poetry (including tables, questionnaires, prescriptions, and more!).
Eligibility
Any adult (18 or older) Black poet of any experience level who is a resident of the city or immediate surrounding area may apply to participate in the workshop. Cave Canem defines Black poets as any poet who identifies as a member of the African Diaspora.
Guidelines
- Applicants must submit five original poems and a short cover letter through the Submittable application.
- One application per poet will be accepted.
- Please note that all workshop participants are required to take a post-workshop survey after the conclusion of the program. Photos of participants may be taken throughout the workshops and reading.
About Douglas Kearney
Douglas Kearney (2000) has published nine books, ranging from poetry to essays to libretti. In 2023, Optic Subwoof, a collection of his Bagley Wright lectures, won the Poetry Foundation’s Pegasus Prize for Poetry Criticism and the CLMP Firecracker Award for Creative Nonfiction. His most recent poetry book, I Imagine I Been Science Fiction Always, is a collection of visual poetry. His poetry collection, Sho (Wave Books, 2021), is a Griffin Poetry Prize and Minnesota Book Award winner, and a National Book Award, Pen America, Hurston/Wright, Kingsley Tufts, and Big Other Book Award finalist. He is the 2021 recipient of OPERA America’s Campbell Opera Librettist Prize, created and generously funded by librettist/lyricist Mark Campbell. Kearney is a 2022 McKnight Writing Fellow. A Whiting Writer’s and Foundation for Contemporary Arts Cy Twombly awardee with residencies/fellowships from Cave Canem, The Rauschenberg Foundation, and others, he teaches Creative Writing at the University of Minnesota–Twin Cities.
New York City - Poets as Deep Thinkers: A Generative Workshop in Call & Response
Instructor: Samiya Bashir
Application Period: July 1 - August 18
Workshop Sessions: September - November, 6-9 PM
Location: Cave Canem Headquarters
Workshop Reading Location: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
Cave Canem’s workshops are rare opportunities for poets of all experience levels to work with and learn directly from accomplished poets in Cave Canem’s network. Limited to small enrollment groups, these multiple-session workshops offer rigorous instruction, careful critique, and an introduction to the work of influential poets. Workshops are tuition-free and free to apply.
About Poets as Deep Thinkers: A Generative Workshop in Call & Response
Over nine weeks, this generative poetry workshop will move in conversation with A Poem for Deep Thinkers—both Amiri Baraka’s razor-sharp 1961 poem and Rashid Johnson’s immersive 2024 Guggenheim installation. Drawing from these bold, Black interventions in text, image, and form, workshop participants will write through the echoes between them—and the world they’re living in now.
Participants will explore what it means to treat a poem like a room, a rupture, a refusal. They’ll work with layers: of memory and erasure, of grief and survival, of form and freedom. Expect collage. Expect disruption. Expect to be moved.
Each week, participants will generate new work rooted in experimentation, deep listening, and Black radical imagination. Through visual art, archival fragments, sound, scholarship, and structure, poets will ask: What do we want our poems to do? What kind of world can we build with them?
Baraka gave us a poem. Rashid Johnson gave us a room. When the world refuses us space, we make it—with language, with vision, with each other. Let’s write our way into the conversation.
This is more than a workshop. This is a call. Let’s answer it—together.
This workshop will privilege experimentation, community, and deep listening. All Black poets are welcome—whether you’re on your first poem or your fiftieth book. Come tender, come wild, come exactly as you are.
“Meet you on the battlefield,”
– Amiri Baraka, “Poem for Deep Thinkers”
Eligibility
Any adult (18 or older) Black poet of any experience level who is a resident of the city or immediate surrounding area may apply to participate in the workshop. Cave Canem defines Black poets as any poet who identifies as a member of the African Diaspora.
Guidelines
- Applicants must submit five original poems and a short cover letter through the Submittable application.
- One application per poet will be accepted.
- Please note that all workshop participants are required to take a post-workshop survey after the conclusion of the program. Photos of participants may be taken throughout the workshops and reading.
About Samiya Bashir
Samiya Bashir (2002) called a “dynamic, shape-shifting machine of perpetual motion,” by Diego Báez, writing for Booklist, is a poet, writer, librettist, performer, and multi-media poetry maker whose work, both solo and collaborative, has been widely published, performed, installed, printed, screened, experienced, and Oxford comma’d from Berlin to Düsseldorf, Amsterdam to Accra, Florence to Rome and across the United States. Sometimes she makes poems of dirt. Sometimes zeros and ones. Sometimes, variously rendered text. Sometimes light. Bashir is the author of four poetry collections, including I Hope This Helps, called her “magnum opus” by Jericho Brown, released in 2025 by Nightboat Books, and recently Field Theories, winner of the 2018 Oregon Book Award. Samiya’s honors include the Rome Prize in Literature, the Pushcart Prize, Oregon’s Arts & Culture Council Individual Artist Fellowship in Literature, plus numerous other awards, grants, fellowships, and residencies, including MacDowell, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the New York Council on the Arts. A sought-after editor, teacher, and writing coach, Bashir lives in Harlem.