Amanda Gorman is harnessing the power of words – and fashion – to rally for change

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amanda gorman

Amanda wears jacket; skirt, both Chanel. Ear cuff; earrings; necklaces; bracelet (worn as necklace); rings, all Tiffany & Co. Photographed by John Edmonds

Amanda Gorman already knows that you want her to save the world. “Young people are expected to rescue everyone, even when we are struggling to rescue ourselves,” she tells me in the same clear, strident voice she used to perform her poem ‘The Hill We Climb’ at President Biden’s 2021 inauguration.

At 22, Gorman became the youngest inaugural poet in American history when she delivered that call for unity on the steps of the US Capitol a mere two weeks after militant far-right factions stormed the building in an attempt to prevent the election from being certified. She would go on to become the first (and so far only) person to recite a poem during the Super Bowl – another performance that would help to thrust her into the stratosphere of the public imagination.

We’re talking on a sunny day in July. Gorman, now 24, is at her home in Los Angeles; I am in Brooklyn. She is wearing a grey zip-up sweater, her flawless brown skin glowing, dappled by the shade in the outdoor courtyard where she’s seated. Occasionally, as we speak, she stops and raises her eyes to the sky; she’s distracted by a hummingbird nearby. It’s an idyllic scene beamed at me through my laptop screen, like those visions of a technocratic green utopian future that were popular in sci-fi films in the early Noughties, back when the future seemed exciting.

The overall response to Gorman’s success, especially from people older than her, has been that she is a symbol of hope – a promise of something better than the division and violence of 2020. But, as Gorman points out: “When my mom was growing up, she was told by the elders around her, ‘Go change the world’. And, in my generation, we’re told to go save the world. It’s completely different stakes when you look at those two sentences. The world that I and so many other members of Gen Z are living in is one of emergency, one of destruction.”

If the members of Gorman’s generation are expected to rescue all humanity against extraordinary odds, “it’s not something we can do alone,” she says. “No sustainable and worthwhile future is ever built by one. It has to be built by many.”

She’s talking about reaching across generations – something that is central to her work. Wherever she writes, she stacks copies of books by the authors she sees as her forebears: James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, Ntozake Shange. “I like to give myself a source of historical power,” she explains. “And then it’s all ‘cross fingers’ from there.”

When my mom was growing up, she was told, ‘Go change the world’. My generation are told to save the world. It’s completely different stakes.

She was raised by her mother, Joan Wicks, in West LA, alongside her twin sister Gabrielle, now a film-maker. Gorman was drawn to writing at an early age. Dinah Berland, who mentored her through the LA-based literary organisation Write Girl, says: “It was clear that Amanda was curious about the path to becoming a successful poet, and I had no doubt that she could get there.” Gorman’s interest in art was matched by a passion for politics, but she sees poetry as part of political work. Poets, she says, “are working with a few syllables. We get the fewest amount of stones to throw to make the most impact. How can I say the most by saying the least?” She has stated in interviews that her ultimate goal is to become president of the United States.

amanda gorman

John Edmonds

But, for now, she is a recent Harvard graduate with the bestselling poetry books The Hill We Climb and Call Us What We Carry. This success comes as the genre itself has seen a renaissance; according to the National Endowment for the Arts, 28 million adults read poetry in 2017 – the highest readership recorded in 15 years, with those aged 18 to 24 representing a large part of that audience. Poets including Gorman, Danez Smith, Rupi Kaur and Patricia Lockwood all loom large on the cultural landscape, aided by the ease of sharing on social-media platforms such as Instagram and TikTok.

Gorman also has an acute sense of the visual possibilities of being a public intellectual. Think of the now-iconic yellow Prada coat and red headband she wore at the inauguration. In this, she is like the writing giants who came before her: Joan Didion, Maya Angelou and even Zadie Smith – all writers who understood fashion as another language to play with. “As much as possible, I try to include my physical person in conversation with the beliefs that I hold,” she says. “There is a real joy and power that comes with being intentional with our aesthetics. It goes beyond looking ‘pretty’. It gets into looking our fullest selves.”

There is a real joy and power that comes with being intentional with our aesthetics

First and foremost, though, Gorman is a lover of words. I ask her what terms she’s currently attracted to, and she offers ‘long haul’. “It sounds so boring,” she says, laughing, “like I’m moving cross-country. But I think so much of what’s happening in the world – the attacks on women’s rights, you choose which disaster – the idea of being in it for the long haul is really important to me.

“Oh!” she adds, as the light continues to fall around her, “also, go vote. Put that in before everything else.” She does, after all, still want to be president one day.

The October 2022 of Harper’s Bazaar UK, featuring the Bazaar Icons portfolio, is available to buy from 1 September.

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