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Category: Blog

Midnight. Climate. Survival.

Seven poets join the call for #MidnightClimateSurvival, urging countries to take stronger climate action now. In response to lines from the poem “Midnight”, by Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner, Ambassador for Culture for the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF), the poets speak of the pain of collective loss under the climate crisis but also deliver a message of solidarity, mutuality, and hope.

This video poem brings together voices from Majuro, Sagada, Willemstad, Maribojoc, Kathmandu, and the diaspora. Jetñil-Kijiner is joined by Gawani Domogo (Sagada, Philippines), an award-winning indigenous writer recognized for her poetry in Kankanaey; María Faciolince (Willemstad, Curaçao), who serves as the Global Voices Producer at Power Shifts Project under Oxfam; Marjorie Evasco (Maribojoc, Philippines), acclaimed Filipino poet whose work has won numerous national and international literary prizes; Pratibha Tuladhar (Kathmandu, Nepal), poet and journalist for over a decade; Luisa Igloria (Baguio, Philippines), Poet Laureate for Virginia in the United States; and Daniel Voskoboynik (Argentina), campaigner, educator and co-founder of the communications initiative The World at 1C.

In a process of long-distance collaboration, each poet responded to Jetñil-Kijiner’s opening lines not knowing what the others would write. They contributed footage taken with their phone cameras in their own locales. Words, images, and sound were stitched together by a team convened by the Agam Agenda.

“Midnight. Climate. Survival.” is an invitation to poets, artists, collectives and communities everywhere to channel the creative impulse towards reimagining and re-assembling kinder futures under the climate crisis. “We need abundant hands” in order for us to survive and thrive on the other side of midnight.

In support of the Midnight Climate Survival campaign.

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Book Making is Like Leaping Through Time

First leap: three weeks back.

Spread out before us on a table are over 30 texts and photographs from Asia and the Pacific, Africa, and Latin America. To get here, we climb five flights of a narrow, wooden spiral staircase in an old apartment in Istanbul. Why are we even in this city?

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Dispatch: International Agam Anthology in the Making

On our first night and day together, the project team convening again after months of painstakingly chasing writers and photographers in order to put together the international sequel to the original anthology, Agam.

We are doing a first pass over submissions from Asia, the Pacific, Africa and Latin America. The initial reading even now haunts all our conversations and makes our hearts hum with grace and trepidation.

Padma Perez, Alex Walter and Rehana Rossouw enjoying the outdoors while hard at work for the next phase of Agam.

Rehana came from Cape Town, Alexandra from Cali, and Padma from Pasay. Feisty and boisterous these women, lovely writers deciphering clues and signs that will bind the submitted stories and allow them to sing.

Istanbul could not have been more appropriate for the task they have chosen to converse and wrestle with. Borders, edges, coasts: This is our setting and what comes to mind in this city is not just hüzün, fado, kundiman, Viennese melancholy, the duduk and the sehenai, but also sunshine and moonshine—companions that will guide the difficult enterprise of giving birth to a new anthology that will face uncertainty squarely, with honesty, and maybe, just maybe, offer durable hope.

Red Constantino and Alexandra Walter takes a stroll while brainstorming for ideas.

Before we broke up for lunch, we reminded ourselves of our mission by listening to a recording of the poet Marjorie Evasco reading in Cebuano her poem Farol de Combate, which she read again in English. Our feet firmly on the ground, yet gliding, we carry on.

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New Podcast & Partnerships

We are conscious of the communicative challenges of science and policy, and we believe art has the power to open space for dialogue and understanding, and to move people in ways jargon cannot. – Agam

Agam is preparing to launch a new podcast this year featuring authors from Agam: Filipino Narratives on Uncertainty and Climate Change reading their original works and sharing their wisdom and ideas on the intersections of storytelling and climate change. We’re excited to be partnering with Far Eastern University. We’re working with FEU Communications students to develop a series of minisodes, and utilizing the recording studio of the Department of Communications at the Institute for Arts and Sciences from time to time.

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