Elani Spencer talks poetry ahead of Glascock contest: “One of the best mediums for change”

Photo courtesy of Elani Spencer

Elani Spencer dreams of starting an artist residency or a slam poetry team in the future. She will represent Hollins University at the competition.

The 102th Kathryn Irene Glascock Intercollegiate Poetry Contest will take place at Mount Holyoke College on April 3 and 4, 2025. It is the oldest continuously-running intercollegiate poetry contest in the country. This year, all of the contestants hail from either historically women’s colleges or gender-diverse women’s colleges. In the days leading up to the contest, Mount Holyoke News will be releasing digital-exclusive profiles of each poet-contestant.

By Jesse Hausknecht-Brown ’25

Staff Writer | Podcast Producer

After her third grade English teacher hung a short story of hers on the wall and bragged about it to her mother, Elani Spencer knew she had to continue writing. 

“From then on, I would spend every single independent reading time writing in my journal in the back of the classroom,” Spencer said in an email to Mount Holyoke News. “Quickly, writing became a passion and not just a hobby.”

Spencer, a sophomore at Hollins University, will represent the university at Mount Holyoke College’s Kathryn Irene Glascock Intercollegiate Poetry Contest on April 3, 2025. Spencer is one of six contestants, all of whom are, for the first time in 97 years, from historically women’s colleges or gender-diverse colleges. Spencer is majoring in creative writing with a concentration in multicultural literature and is a business minor.

This won’t be Spencer’s first time competing in a poetry competition. In 2021, they won first place at the secondAnnual Juneteenth Poetry Slam with their poem “11 reasons why this is our home,” which they will read again for the Glascock Poetry Contest. 

“Although I have participated in a poetry competition in the past, this is my first time competing on a regional level,” Spencer said. “I know the room is going to be bursting with talent, and I can’t wait to learn from all the participants, judges, and Mount Holyoke staff. Also, I’m looking forward to sharing my work with new people, and connecting with other young writers.”

Spencer explained that Michelle DeGroot, chair of the Department of English and Creative Writing at Hollins University, believed she would be a good choice to represent Hollins given that she, as Roanoke, Virginia’s inaugural Youth Poet Laureate, has experience performing her poetry.

Through their poetry, Spencer hopes to inspire others to both engage with poetry as a form and to create change. “Poetry is one the best mediums for change, so if everyone partakes in it, I think we can do a lot of good in the world,” Spencer said.

“I explore current events, racial discrimination, intersectionality, familial relationships, ancestry, mental health, poverty, feminism, and generational trauma,” Spencer said. “I delve deep into these serious topics for the purpose of finding healing, encouraging reflection, and creating a safe space for others to feel understood.”

They draw inspiration from Danez Smith’s poem “Dinosaurs in the Hood” because of its critique of Black representation in film and media. In the poem, Smith writes, “I want Viola Davis to save the city in the last scene with a black fist afro pick / through the last dinosaur’s long, cold-blood neck. But this can’t be / a black movie. This can’t be a black movie.”

Spencer states that “through this poem, [Smith] tells his readers that we must advocate for [and] make art that showcases the Black community in a genuine, authentic light. This is exactly what I strive to do within my own poetry by writing about my experiences as a Black woman.”

When she isn’t writing poetry, Spencer also enjoys writing fiction — specifically magical realism — and has a passion for fantasy. Her ultimate goal is to run her own “fantasy-themed artist residency where writers come to create and engage in community together.” As a reader, she also likes the high fantasy genre, especially when it includes “heist plots and a dash of romance, murder mysteries, and literally anything with a queer character.”

While Spencer wants to continue making art and publish her writing in book form, she also wants to ground her work in teaching and mentorship. “I aspire to start my own slam poetry team where I coach young adults to prepare them for competitions,” Spencer said. “Also, I want to teach freelance creative writing workshops for all ages, and inspire more people to engage in poetry.”

Alayna Khan ’27 contributed fact-checking.