Halifax appoints Afua Cooper new poet laureate
Scholar, author and social justice advocate wants to uncover residents’ untold stories
Halifax’s new poet laureate says everybody has a tale to tell, and for the next two years the accomplished scholar, author and social justice advocate says she’ll work to uncover residents’ untold stories.
“There are so many voices here from all over the world and each community is brimming with stories, is brimming with spoken word, is brimming with poetry,” Afua Cooper said in an interview Monday.
“We have the old established communities, and we have the new communities. I really want to be an ambassador and work at the grassroots level to bring these voices to the fore.”
Cooper has published five books of poetry and is also a writer of young adult fiction and history.
She is the co-creator of Black Halifax, an interdisciplinary presentation that uses poetry and spoken word to tell Halifax’s 300 year-old African Nova Scotian history.
Her book “The Hanging of Angelique: The Untold Story of Slavery in Canada and the Burning of Old Montreal” was a national best-seller, and was short listed for the Governor General’s Award.
Cooper assumes the mantle of Halifax poet laureate on Tuesday, becoming the seventh in a line of female poets who have used the position to shed light on community issues and spark political action.
A poem last year by outgoing poet laureate Rebecca Thomas — a Mi’kmaq woman and the first Indigenous person to hold the role — prompted council to reopen debate over how the city commemorates its controversial founder.
The statue of Edward Cornwallis was later removed from a downtown park.
El Jones, who served in the role before Thomas, spoke out about racism in Halifax and the need for social change.
Cooper applauded the accomplishments of the previous poets laureate, noting that they used poetry and spoken word to address important issues in the community.