Zedeka Poindexter has had a good year.
In the spring, the Omaha-born performance poet was named slam master of the Om Center Poetry Slam, a monthly event where Omahaโs nationally recognized slam teams come together. She was named a 2014 fall fellow at the Union for Contemporary Art. In January, sheโalongside Nebraska State Poet Twyla M. Hansenโwill present in a new interactive poetry reading series at KANEKO called Feedback. A week and a half after that, sheโll read at a Backwaters Press-sponsored reading at the Community Engagement Center. She was nominated for the Omaha Entertainment and Arts Awardโs Best Slam Poet title for 2014 and again for 2015.
โItโs really strange,โ she said. โI wasnโt expecting it. Itโs like all the things I thought I possibly might want are all happening.
โMatt told me I should probably start investing in lottery tickets, because this is a pretty good run.โ
That Matt is Matt Mason, the longtime master of the Om slam who handed the reins to Poindexter in May. A longtime fixture of the slam sceneโand a three-time member of the Omaha Slam Team, the rotating members of which compete at the National Poetry Slamโshe was well-positioned to take the role. Now that sheโs in it, sheโs been hosting regular โslam family meetingsโ and trying to connect the cityโs slam poetry, spoken word, and other creative communities.
โIt hasnโt been without its challenges,โ Poindexter said. โWhile slam has a very specific following, I wouldnโt say itโs as wide-reaching as I would like it to be. A lot of it is just a matter of making sure weโre talking to each other. Spoken word is so diverse, and slam is just one specific outlet. Thereโs so much out thereโitโs a matter of us all appreciating things we do well and opening our arms wide.โ
To that end, Poindexter has her eye on bringing one of slamโs most prominent national competitions, the Women of the World Poetry Slam, to Omaha in 2016. Started in 2008, WOWPS is a three-day event designed to foster womenโs involvement in the global slam poetry scene.
โWe could have the top 80 women in performance poetry from this country and other countries here,โ Poindexter said. โI think weโre well-placed for that.โ
Sheโs also at work on an exhibition piece sheโll show with the other Union for Contemporary Art fall fellows at the completion of their fellowship. Sheโs been working with the ideas of food and family, building a table with place settings and love letters for people living and dead sheโd like to have at her table.
It makes sense for this poet locally known for a piece about her familyโs recipe for peach cobbler, for a writer whoโs filled a notebook with the Southern idioms her mother and grandmother would use, for a woman who wants to help people tell stories while she tells her own, too.
โThereโs this idea that you can go into someoneโs mind,โ she said. โSlam is the perfect vehicle for that: You can see it in [poetsโ] faces and their reactions, and they can see it in your face and your reactions. No matter how tired or frustrated or fed up I get with art in general, I donโt think I could ever truly walk away. There are so many stories out there to hear that keep me coming back. Iโm certain thereโs something I havenโt heard yet. And then I think if I listen hard enough, Iโll be able to write it myself.
โWith the way things have been going, maybe Iโll be the first to write something Iโve been waiting to hear. I hope. I hope.โ
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