It's International Working Women's Day today and there is a lot being said right now about the need to enforce the rights of women—not just women who are urban, upper caste, cis and straight, but all those women whose histories have been erased in textbooks and book launches. Dalit women, black women, trans women, sex workers and union leaders—now is the best time to remember them and pledge our solidarity to their struggles. It is also true, however, that solidarity and understanding cannot always take the shape of rage. For one thing, rage itself has often taken the form of piercing wit and delightful poetry. And the world has benefitted as much from its poets and as it has from its warriors.
To quote Audre Lorde, "For women…poetry is not a luxury. It is a vital/ necessity of our existence. It forms the quality of the light/ within which we predicate our hopes and dreams toward/ survival and change, first made into language, then into idea,/ then into more tangible action."
Here, then, is a list of five poets you are unlikely to find in your textbooks and glossy magazines.