Poem

Lullaby

Title Lullaby
Author Lola Ridge

Instances of Publication

A published appearance of this poem.

Collection/Anthology Year of Publication Medium View Details
The Ghetto and Other Poems 1918 Print Collection View Details
Publication Instance Details #3348
Collection/Anthology Details
Collection/Anthology The Ghetto and Other Poems
Date of Publication 1918
Publisher B. W. Huebsch (USA)
Publication Overview
Translation Is Multilingual Explicit Irish Context? Ekphrasis Has Paratext? Reference to News, Media or Technology
No
No
No
No
Yes
No
Details
Human Rights Issues
Languages
Genre Dramatic Monologue
Medium Print Collection
Paratext Text (An incident of the East St. Louis Race Riots, when some white women flung a living colored baby into the heart of a blazing fire.)
Notes As the paratext indicates, this poem responds to a particular incidence of racial violence during the East St. Louis Race Riots of 1917. It is composed in the form of a lullaby from the perspective of a white female who apparently takes on a caring role soothing a black child, but whose murderous intentions become evident when she throws him onto a bonfire, where his own mother is already being burned in an act of racial hatred. There is explicit reference to state complicity in the violence - men dressed 'in blue an' khaki' - do not protect the child or his mother, but join with the mob. Notably, this poem disrupts gendered and racial stereotypes: the main perpetrator of violence in this poem is a white female, supported and assisted in her actions by white men and women.
Is bunachar beo é seo. Entries continue to be updated.