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From Unincorporated Territory [Åmot]

From Unincorporated Territory [Åmot]
Author: Craig Santos Perez
Publisher: Omnidawn
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023-04-05
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9781632431189

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Experimental and visual poems diving into the history and culture of the poet's homeland, Guam. This book is the fifth collection in Craig Santos Perez's ongoing from unincorporated territory series about the history of his homeland, the western Pacific island of Guåhan (Guam), and the culture of his indigenous Chamoru people. "Åmot" is the Chamoru word for "medicine," commonly referring to medicinal plants. Traditional Chamoru healers were known as yo'åmte; they gathered åmot in the jungle and recited chants and invocations of taotao'mona, or ancestral spirits, in the healing process. Through experimental and visual poetry, Perez explores how storytelling can become a symbolic form of åmot, offering healing from the traumas of colonialism, militarism, migration, environmental injustice, and the death of elders.


Iep Jaltok

Iep Jaltok
Author: Kathy Jetnil-Kijiner
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 91
Release: 2017-02-14
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 0816534020

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"Iep jāltok is a collection of poetry by a young Marshallese woman highlighting the traumas of her people through colonialism, racism, forced migration, the legacy of nuclear testing by America, and the impending threats of climate change"--Provided by publisher.


Henceforce

Henceforce
Author: Kamden Ishmael Hilliard
Publisher: Omnidawn
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9781632430687

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In henceforce, Kamden Ishmael Hilliard's poems take us on unimaginable voyages within and beyond the contours of our quotidian experience. This is not simply geographic travel, however: though Hilliard's poems explore air travel, transcontinental locations, and even intergalactic scenes, their travel poetic asks us to move through and beyond deeply entrenched social boundaries. The movement depicted and encouraged here brings the reader into contact with figures that destabilize our notions of race, gender, and nation. Hilliard's language, too, transgresses boundaries. For any reader who loves strange encounters with the familiar and the thrill of disorientation, these poems will prove challenging in a deeply exhilarating way, asking the reader to question the limits of their gaze, their language, their sense of place, and ultimately to reaffirm their personhood.


Navigating CHamoru Poetry

Navigating CHamoru Poetry
Author: Craig Santos Perez
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 273
Release: 2022-01-25
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0816535507

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For the first time, Navigating CHamoru Poetry focuses on Indigenous CHamoru (Chamorro) poetry from the Pacific Island of Guåhan (Guam). In this book, poet and scholar Craig Santos Perez navigates the complex relationship between CHamoru poetry, cultural identity, decolonial politics, diasporic migrations, and native aesthetics.


Poetry Unbound: 50 Poems to Open Your World

Poetry Unbound: 50 Poems to Open Your World
Author: Pádraig Ó. Tuama
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 198
Release: 2022-12-06
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 132403548X

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“Mesmerizing, magical, deeply moving.” —Elif Shafak Expanding on the popular podcast of the same name from On Being Studios, Poetry Unbound offers immersive reflections on fifty powerful poems. In the tumult of our contemporary moment, poetry has emerged as an inviting, consoling outlet with a unique power to move and connect us, to inspire fury, tears, joy, laughter, and surprise. This generous anthology pairs fifty illuminating poems with poet and podcast host Pádraig Ó Tuama’s appealing, unhurried reflections. With keen insight and warm personal anecdotes, Ó Tuama considers each poem’s artistry and explores how its meaning can reach into our own lives. Focusing mainly on poets writing today, Ó Tuama engages with a diverse array of voices that includes Ada Limón, Ilya Kaminsky, Margaret Atwood, Ocean Vuong, Layli Long Soldier, and Reginald Dwayne Betts. Natasha Trethewey meditates on miscegenation and Mississippi; Raymond Antrobus makes poetry out of the questions shot at him by an immigration officer; Martín Espada mourns his father; Marie Howe remembers and blesses her mother’s body; Aimee Nezhukumatathil offers comfort to her child-self. Through these wide-ranging poems, Ó Tuama guides us on an inspiring journey to reckon with self-acceptance, history, independence, parenthood, identity, joy, and resilience. For anyone who has wanted to try their hand at a conversation with poetry but doesn’t know where to start, Poetry Unbound presents a window through which to celebrate the art of being alive.


Prairie Style

Prairie Style
Author: C. S. Giscombe
Publisher: Dalkey Archive Press
Total Pages: 106
Release: 2008
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1564785130

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"Prairie Style is about the breakdown of location and voice. It lays out a landscape of habitations (Frank Lloyd Wright's designs for "servantless families," fox dens in an embankment, the two-mile long face of Chicago's Robert Taylor public housing project, etc.) and crosses and recrosses the line between poetry and prose. The book is an acknowledgement of the "terrible frankness" of color, pleasure's distance, and the similarity of equivocation and argument. Prairie Style is the turn inland. "Inland, one needs something more racial, say bigger, than mountains.""--BOOK JACKET.


Coal Mountain Elementary

Coal Mountain Elementary
Author: Mark Nowak
Publisher:
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2009
Genre: Poetry
ISBN:

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"A tribute to miners and working people everywhere."--Howard Zinn


Lines the Quarry

Lines the Quarry
Author: Robin D. Clarke
Publisher: Omnidawn
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9781890650896

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Lines the Quarry writes of and into that ongoing disaster and possibility, interjecting into the commercial language of success the many violations--bodily and otherwise--that define capitalist exploitation.


Habitat Threshold

Habitat Threshold
Author: Craig Santos Perez
Publisher: Omnidawn
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9781632430809

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"Native Pacific Islander writer Craig Santos Perez has crafted a timely collection of eco-poetry comprised of free verse, prose, haiku, sonnets, satire, and a form he calls "recycling." Habitat Threshold begins with the birth and growth of the author's daughter and captures her childlike awe at the wondrous planet. As the book progresses, however, Perez confronts the impacts of environmental injustice, global capitalism, toxic waste, animal extinctions, water struggles, human violence, mass migration, and climate change. Throughout, Perez mourns lost habitats and species and faces his fears about the world his daughter will inherit. Yet this work does not end at the threshold of elegy; instead, the poet envisions a sustainable future in which our ethics are shaped by the indigenous belief that the earth is sacred and all beings are interconnected--a future in which we cultivate love and "carry each other towards the horizon of care.""--


Faces of Fishing Creek

Faces of Fishing Creek
Author: Kyle Laws
Publisher:
Total Pages: 74
Release: 2018-09-30
Genre:
ISBN: 9780998932217

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Faces of Fishing Creek is a novella in poems in the voices of two characters, Clara and Joseph, who developed an isolated section of Southern New Jersey as a summer resort for Philadelphia residents. "There is a delicious complexity in Kyle Laws' Faces of Fishing Creek. On the surface, these poems tell the story of Joseph and Clara, a Russian husband and wife in flight from the Bolshevik Revolution, who come to America and eke out a living on the shores of Delaware Bay. But in the depths of these poems, other currents are work: the forces of history, social prejudice, conflicting ambitions, and thwarted desire. These two vivid voices and their tutelary spirits-Joseph's Pushkin and Clara's Akhmatova-articulate parallel lives that never manage the kind of open communication on which love depends. Except, of course, within the imagination of Kyle Laws herself, where their story and her own come together through the redemptive power of art." -Joseph Hutchison, Colorado Poet Laureate "These poems are like whispers in the night, the intimate and uneasy thoughts of Clara and Joseph, "two twined against nor'easters, /roots deeper than reeds in the runoff." What poignant pleasure to spend time with them on the edge of things-the sea, a new world, a questionable business venture, the coming modernity, each other-here in Fishing Creek, "where the wind off bay roars not far from the Atlantic, /over the deep channel off a cliff of shoals." Kyle Laws has created a whole world in these poems and these characters that tangles us thoroughly in its tides and its winds in the saltgrass." -Marilyn McCabe, author of Perpetual Motion and Glass Factory "Faces of Fishing Creek is a beautifully crafted novella in verse about the deep history, racial politics, and changing ecology of the author's childhood village in Southern New Jersey. Kyle Laws tells this story through the heartbreaking lives of Clara and Joseph, whose voices echo across the landscape long after the book ends. This is a haunting work about migration and dreams, love and loss, memory and belonging." -Craig Santos Perez, author of From Unincorporated Territory [Lukao] and From Unincorporated Territory [Guma'] "Here I learned grief./I came to know it to be as deep/as the artesian well/at the top of New Jersey Avenue./There is nothing I cannot imagine/being done in its name." In Kyle Laws' historically-based novella in verse Faces of Fishing Creek, the reader follows Clara and Joseph's journey from the streets of Old World Odessa to the wind-whipped shoreline of New Jersey's Wildwood Villas. In pared down verse-reminiscent of Akhmatova's Acmeist sensibilities-Laws invokes the beauty and terror of the natural world and the shifting cultural landscape of the United States in the first half of the twentieth century. Unflinchingly, these poems document one immigrant family's survival story and a lineage of oppression and segregation as the speaker, the poet herself, grapples with her family's complicity in a Caucasian-only land covenant. Faces of Fishing Creek is a brave and necessary collection, attempting to own one small corner of America's murky, racist history." -Emari DiGiorgio, author of Girl Torpedo and The Things a Body Might Become