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OverviewBody of Render explores the internal and external impacts on our humanity when political, national, and societal decisions strip away our basic human rights. What does it mean to be an underrepresented individual in a country where the most powerful seat in the land unashamedly perpetuates racist, misogynistic, homophobic, and classist behaviors? The voices document a journey before and after the last presidential election. These poems cry out for reconsideration of our broken systems to find common and safe ground rooted in equitable treatment of each other as human beings. How do we exude love when being a person of color or underrepresented person in this country means the dominate white-male-able-bodied-heterosexual narrative continues to threaten our voices? This collection carves at the physical, the political, the intimate, and the structural with poems that simultaneously create and encourage voice to seek a path toward collective mending. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Felicia ZamoraPublisher: Red Hen Press Imprint: Red Hen Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.80cm Weight: 0.136kg ISBN: 9781597099752ISBN 10: 1597099759 Pages: 104 Publication Date: 04 June 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsLanguage is action in these poems, which are utterances of pleading, fighting, and mending in an America we can hardly stand to look at straight on. Body of Render is a book of saying what must be said: say Capitol Hill be voice of all your people, be just; in haunt, you must be voice, must. The risks Felicia Zamora takes with form, syntax, and breath pay off in poem after poem--and make Body of Render one of the most dynamic--most transformative--collections I've read in years. --Maggie Smith, author of Good Bones In 1917, NAACP organizer James Weldon Johnson wrote To America, a poem in which he asked, How would you have us, as we are?//...Rising or falling? And with the (unjust, Russian-influenced) election of 2016, one hundred years later we (migrants, people of color, women, queer, trans and non-binary folx, folx with disabilities, abuse survivors, and all who believe equity is true freedom) are still forced to fight for better answers than the ones America is giving. How grateful I am to hear Felicia Zamora's heart and voice rising, reminding us that alone is not us. Here is a book that is part elegy, part ecstasy, part clapback, and all vision. How she zooms in on the microscopic wonder of cells only to zoom out to remind us what we are capable of. oh / unanswerable molecule of you; oh inorganic beast; oh / organic beast; burn down, day day, then rise. Thank you, Felicia, for lifting us (and yourself!) up with these prayer-poems. May this book usher in freedom--simple and mighty. --TC Tolbert, author of Gephyromania Language is action in these poems, which are utterances of pleading, fighting, and mending in an America we can hardly stand to look at straight on. Body of Render is a book of saying what must be said: say Capitol Hill be voice of all your people, be just; in haunt, you must be voice, must. The risks Felicia Zamora takes with form, syntax, and breath pay off in poem after poem--and make Body of Render one of the most dynamic--most transformative--collections I've read in years. --Maggie Smith, author of Good Bones In 1917, NAACP organizer James Weldon Johnson wrote To America, a poem in which he asked, How would you have us, as we are?//...Rising or falling? And with the (unjust, Russian-influenced) election of 2016, one hundred years later we (migrants, people of color, women, queer, trans and non-binary folx, folx with disabilities, abuse survivors, and all who believe equity is true freedom) are still forced to fight for better answers than the ones America is giving. How grateful I am to hear Felicia Zamora's heart and voice rising, reminding us that alone is not us. Here is a book that is part elegy, part ecstasy, part clapback, and all vision. How she zooms in on the microscopic wonder of cells only to zoom out to remind us what we are capable of. oh / unanswerable molecule of you; oh inorganic beast; oh / organic beast; burn down, day day, then rise. Thank you, Felicia, for lifting us (and yourself!) up with these prayer-poems. May this book usher in freedom--simple and mighty. --TC Tolbert, author of Gephyromania In response to the 2016 election and resulting stripping of basic human rights, Zamora penned this compelling and dynamic collection to enrage and inspire action. --Featured in Ms. Magazine's list of Poetry for the Rest of Us 2020 Featured in The Latinx Project's La Treintena: 30 Books of Latinx Poetry: A Review by Urayoan Noel Body of Render is a searing collection of poems...This book is the perfect read for #nationalpoetrymonth and may be of interest for poetry lovers and those keen on themes of identity and politics. --Marian Perales, The Bookslut Author InformationFelicia Zamora’s books include Body of Render, the 2018 Benjamin Saltman Award winner, Instrument of Gaps, & in Open, Marvel, and Of Form & Gather, the 2016 Andrés Montoya Poetry Prize winner. A 2019 CantoMundo fellow, she won the 2015 Tomaž Šalamun Prize and was Poet Laureate of Fort Collins, CO. Her poems appear in Academy of American Poets (Poem-A-Day), the Georgia Review, the Missouri Review (Poem of the Week), The Nation, and others. She is an editor for Colorado Review and programs manager for the Virginia G. Piper Center for Creative Writing at Arizona State University. She lives in Phoenix, Arizona. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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