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Sto caricando le informazioni... Shelldi Olive Senior
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In Shell, Olive Senior continues her ongoing investigation of the natural world, the nature of poetry and the power of her Caribbean heritage. She is our guide through realms of miniature elegance, those of shells in their abundant manifestations. With her grace, generosity and world-renowned lyricism, Senior gives us hen's eggs as hymns, molluscs as metaphors, shells of all kinds -- sometimes fragile, sometimes unyielding -- as home, as womb, as token and as totem. Ultimately, she places these shells, small and delicate, at the heart of the Jamaican cane fields, revealing a history rich with culture and haunted by slavery. These are Senior's most powerful and affirming poems to date. Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)811.54Literature English (North America) American poetry 20th Century 1945-1999Classificazione LCVotoMedia:
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She began writing them many years earlier, but had a goal of finishing them by 2007, the 200th anniversary of Britain's abolition of the slave trade.
The collection was, indeed, published that year, and its title seems to have emerged throughout that process, rather than as part of an initial vision, so it's remarkable how many of the works fit this motif.
The diverse ways in which this occurs is also evident in the author's notes:
"The sugar cane plant itself is a hard shell imprisoning the gold within. But that shell has to be beaten and crushed to release its sweet juice, the first step in making sugar, a chilling metaphor for the way millions of human beings were beaten and crushed in order to produce it."
Sometimes a poem will discuss an actual shell (like the beautiful cover image).
Other times it may consider the shell of an idea, something inherently intangible.
Sometimes the word may appear in another context entirely, as in:
"The slave ship shell-shock dark
as the night-filled gourd...."
Occasionally the word will appear within another word (as is the case with the section of poems titled "Shelter").
In many instances, and specifically in the longer work which did broadcast the collection's title to the poet, it's important to think about the shell as much for the emptiness that can inhabit it as it is to consider any content.
And, even in this very brief excerpt, there is a glimpse of the author's word-work, the sense that each word is deliberately chosen for sound and sense, that every single letter is playing a role.
There are occasional excerpts from historical works; for instance, this statement is pulled from Auguste Cochin: "The story of a lump of sugar is a whole lesson in political economy, in politics, and also in morality."
Some of the poems reach back hundreds of years, others firmly inhabit the years in which slavery was rampant, others follow which raise questions about the type of labour relied upon after the slave trade was officially abolished.
Black-and-white photographs appear throughout the collection (e.g. artwork, photographs, woodcuts) bringing the verses off the page, making even a casual-poetry-reader feel more comfortable.
The excerpts, the expanse of time, the images: all of these contribute to the sense that this is a work with a broad canvas, which deserves to be considered in a wider context of works. It is more than 100 pages. More indeed.
[Originally posted, in a slightly longer form, on Buried In Print.] ( )