Our Gatherings
Originally, the LOGOS series was hosted monthly in-person at Lazarus Brewing Co.
Since the pandemic, LOGOS Gatherings have been translated
from analog to ZOOM + Facebook LIVE.
We also host frequent in-person Gatherings across the country.
Find our more on our Upcoming Events page.
Join us & help spread the love!
Our Story
It all began with a conversation: a priest and a poet walk into a coffee shop … for real. A conversation births an idea; the idea shapes an experiment, a project. The project becomes LOGOS Poetry Collective — becomes a community.
In Greek, the word LOGOS — λόγος — means word (as in logic — speech or reason). In time, philosophers began using logos to refer to a universal organizing principle: an underlying force or order that animates and shapes all things. At LOGOS Collective, we explore this deeper register embedded in the verbiage we all use, the Word within the words.
The priest listened; and the poet described the frustration she felt with the typical format of the poetry readings she and her friends experienced: with the way readings can sometimes feel stagnant and transactional — readings where you either passively receive poetry as an audience member, or actively discharge it on people as a reader. The priest said something about ritual as “embodied poetry.” She paused. She said she and her friends wouldn’t ever attend church (the content would be off-putting). But that idea of form — of the intentional way that time and energy were organized to foster an experience of transcendence — captivated her imagination.
Our Community
So the logic of LOGOS was introduced: a project that would integrate the rhythm and participatory dynamism of ritual into the context of a poetry reading. When we gather each month, we begin by reading a poem responsively. Two poets then share three poems each (the last of which is printed for everyone to read). We open space to explore and reflect on those poems in clusters, and then engage in some dialogue and meaningful conversation with the poet who created them. The poet has a chance to listen and respond: to have her or his poems attended to with real love and appreciation. We then share some “communion” (tacos & libations) at table with one another.
All are welcome — to listen, share, and connect. We are meaning-making creatures; and by attending closely, even lovingly, to the language that we use — especially the artful, compressed language of poetry — we experience ruptures in our everyday way of relating. We find deeper ways to connect with one another, and perhaps experience something of transcendence. We would love for you to join us.
Our Convictions & Commitments
LOGOS Collective believes in the “somebodiness” (Martin Luther King, Jr.) of all people, and is committed to working for the flourishing of all people, all bodies. While we affirm the rights of free speech and the virtues of self-expression, we condemn and denounce all forms of denigration and descrimination, including but not limited to: written and verbal expressions of sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, ageism, ableism, classism, xenophobia, and religious intoleration. We will always strive to create a safe, brave space — in which generative conversations are cultivated, meaningful connections are made, and durable relationships are built — for all people. Yet, when it comes down to it, LOGOS commits to being on the side of individuals and communities who are or have been in any way underrepresented, marginalized, or oppressed by authorities of the dominant cultures and systems of power and of privilege. We earnestly hope that LOGOS is more than a reading series. We believe that every person is worthy of love, dignity, acceptance, and belonging — and we aim to support and catalyze a culture that strives to embody the work of love and liberation in speech, poetry, and action.
LOGOS was launched in 2017 as a liturgically-inflected reading series and community with a goal of evoking transcendence through poetry, ritual, and conversation.
In 2021 we launched EcoTheo Collective, a deeper partnership between EcoTheo Review and LOGOS Collective, which has grown to include Wonder in Wyoming and the Starshine and Clay Fellowships, a collaboration with Cave Canem. The Collective designed the website you now see to house our work, but the original LOGOS website can still be found at:
archive.logoscollective.org
While the original LOGOS site is no longer kept up-to-date, we still invite you to peruse to gain a sense of the original LOGOS vision. For any other questions about the old or new site, contact our web editor by email at carter@ecotheo.org.