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17 pages 34 minutes read

Daniel Beaty

Knock Knock

Fiction | Poem | Adult | Published in 2013

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Further Reading & Resources

Related Poems

Because slam poetry is about performance as much as about writing, it should be watched as well as read. This Book Riot article compiles the recordings of 12 highly regarded slam poems, all of them very energetic and socially engaged. They include the three poems listed below, which share Beaty’s emphasis on race. Watch the poets’ performances here and use the links below to read their words.

Principles” by Danez Smith (2016)

Like “Knock Knock,” this poem is a powerful indictment of racism, but it is longer than a typical slam poem and explores a much wider range of issues and feelings related to African American life in the United States.

Hair” by Elizabeth Acevedo (2016)

This poem uses hair as a metaphor for the prejudice and stereotyping that a Dominican woman faces, even from her own family. The poet’s “wild” hair represents who she is, and it requires no “fixing” as a form of assimilation.

Mama” by Emi Mahmoud (2015)

In this poem, a Sudanese American female poet condemns those whose love for Blackness is skin deep and who assume they know her because of her looks but care little about the hardship that Black women experience in Africa. She praises her mama, a Black woman whose strength and grace are much deeper than her skin.

Further Literary Resources

Putting Drama to Work to Soothe” by Scott Timberg (2014)

This New York Times article reports on Daniel Beaty’s views on the role of art in healing and social transformation; the poet’s troubled history with his father, which inspired “Knock Knock”; and his work as a playwright and actor.

Daniel Beaty cowrote and acted in the 2016 film “Chapter and Verse,” about a reformed gang leader who tries to readjust to life after eight years in prison. In this Los Angeles Sentinel interview, Beaty and his costar Loretta Devine discuss the film and its partial inspiration in the events and people from Beaty’s own life.

In Conversation with KOA” by ArtsEmerson (2021)

In this video interview with David C. Howse, the Executive Director for ArtsEmerson, an art organization at Emerson College in Boston, Beaty explains how the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer inspired him to explore his African heritage and eventually change his name into KOA.

Knock Knock by Daniel Beaty and illustrated by Bryan Collier (2013)

This simplified and illustrated version of Beaty’s poem won the 2014 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award. This version of the original poem is shorter and limited to a child’s questions and concerns, yet the overall message still resonates.

Listen to Poem

There are several versions of Daniel Beaty’s performance of the poem available online. This one is his original performance on the HBO show Def Poetry Jam.

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