Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Landscape with Bloodfeud: Juniper Prize for Poetry

Autor Wendy Barnes
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 29 apr 2022
Scarred by nuclear smokestacks, oil wells, and surging floodwaters, and haunted by the legacies of slavery, racism, and French rule, the Louisiana of Landscape with Bloodfeud is disenchanted but still exerts an undeniable pull. Reckoning with displacement, ancestral guilt, and centuries of human and environmental exploitation, Wendy Barnes dissects the state’s turbulent past—as a microcosm of colonial oppression, westward expansion, and the birth of global capitalism. With an expat’s detachment, our Louisiana-born speaker contemplates her fraught relationship with her home culture and her white working-class roots, raising questions about complicity and shame, as history “bleeds us all for its tax, some for more, / digging down into every wet wound, / digging down among the taproots, under old folks’ / marble tombs or unmarked graves.”
Citește tot Restrânge

Din seria Juniper Prize for Poetry

Preț: 11574 lei

Puncte Express: 174

Preț estimativ în valută:
2047 2432$ 1783£

Carte indisponibilă temporar

Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781625346414
ISBN-10: 1625346417
Pagini: 104
Dimensiuni: 140 x 229 x 10 mm
Greutate: 0.14 kg
Editura: University of Massachusetts Press
Colecția University of Massachusetts Press
Seria Juniper Prize for Poetry


Notă biografică

WENDY BARNES iscurrently artist in residence at the University of Central Oklahoma. A finalist for the Crab Orchard Series in Poetry First Book Award, her creative and critical work has appeared in NarrativestorySouth, Painted Bride QuarterlySpoon River Poetry ReviewSlice, and Coldfront, among other outlets. She lives in Jersey City, New Jersey.
 

Cuprins

1. Witness, the Levee
 
Part I
2. The Revenant Quarrels with Weather
3. Reflection in Muddy Water
4. How Bienville Enlightens the Bottomland, 1718
5. Affliction Parish
6. Cityscape with Carnival
7. Photograph from Angola Penitentiary, 1935
8. Landscape with Accent
9. The Hunt
 
Part II
10. Landscape with Bloodfeud
 
Part III
11. The Revenant Retraces Her Steps
12. Self-Portrait as Solid, Liquid, Gas
13. South of the Narcissus
14. Interior with Locked Doors
15. The Collaborator
16. How My Forebears Whitewash History
17. The Profiteers: The Chicago, St. Louis, and New Orleans Railroad, 1878
18. The Cadillac Club, 1922
19. Jitterbug, 1953
20. Wetlands, Wherein the Orphans
21. Epistle from a Sunken City
22. The Part-Time Penitent’s Guide to Modern Farming

Part IV
23. Barataria Bay, Louisiana
 
Part V
24. Landscape, Unmoored
25. Bayou Manchac Love Report
26. The Revenant Addresses the Victims, 2005
27. The Mardi Gras Ball, 1999
28. Chalmette, Louisiana, 1988
29. How a Profiteer Cuts Losses, 2010
30. At Congo Square, 2015
31. Danziger Bridge, Redux
32. The Swamp Hag’s Vigil
Acknowledgments
Notes

Recenzii

“In Landscape with Bloodfeud there are at least two ways to go. There is a path to some kind of justice. and there is a path to the end of mercy. Barnes’s poetry admits homesickness driven by shame, guilt, love, and most of all, a search for some kind of truth to be found in the place the speaker damns and praises, loves and left. In tortuously rich poems, this book records a private coming to terms. ‘But surely I exaggerate this shame / just to give myself a pass— / do I think I’m virtuous because I claim / these past misdeeds?’”—Dara Wier, author of You Good Thing

“There is an eloquent and brave kind of cartography here. These poems have in them a burgeoning, a flood of language, image, culture, and a stark interrogation of the American self that make them essential. ‘Welcome / to the parish of fenced-in / vernacular.’ Landscape with Bloodfeud is an exquisitely crafted and mesmerizing debut collection.”—Sean Nevin, author Oblivio Gate
 
Landscape with Bloodfeud is remarkable for its paradoxical strengths: its descriptive power and delicacy, its weave of linguistic panache with rhetorical nonchalance, the sheer scale of the conception and the line-by-line finesse. Remarkable already, even before the reader takes in that the whole bloody saga takes place on a tightrope of conscience.”—Robert Carnevale, co-translator of Apollo in the Grass: Selected Poems