|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewA descendent of Armenian genocide survivors on her mother's side, Simon Fraser University professor Celeste Nazeli Snowber explores the relationship between longing, belonging, and identity. In The Marrow of Longing, her third book of poetry, Snowber traces her own aches of heart, intergenerational trauma, yearnings of body and the lessons learned in kitchen conversations to uncover universal themes and, in doing so, she effectively leads readers to discover what has shaped their own lives. The inherited trauma of the Armenian genocide marked Snowber's childhood. Her poems express both the sense of loss which that event created within the culture and the counterbalancing satisfaction of being a survivor and witness. In reflecting on her own childhood, The Marrow of Longing explores universal experiences: fragmented memories of grandparents, parents' love letters, prayers in the night, cooking in the kitchen, and relationship to place. ""Fragments can hold a world,"" says Snowber. Snowber's work is always both deeply personal and deeply interpersonal. In excavating her own vulnerabilities and longings she invites the reader into a community of reflection. ""look beneath the surface / how many dimensions/ one object, one heart holds. ""Motherhood is a recurring theme within The Marrow of Longing. Snowber recalls the lessons learned in kitchen conversations with her mother: the biographical details, the recipes of the old country, the wisdom of the ancestors. ""My mother had an / eggplant soul / a beauty of both / dark and light / rough and tender...the meeting of art and life / just beneath the skin of plum black."" In other poems, Snowber speaks directly to her ancestral homeland as a living entity, ""I am letting you / wash over me Armenia / stone to stone /kachkar to kachkar, / lavash to lavash/ ... dance my olive skin / on your baptized land."" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Celeste Nazeli Snowber , Marsha Nourtiza OdabashianPublisher: Harp Publishing the People's Press Imprint: Harp Publishing the People's Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.186kg ISBN: 9781990137068ISBN 10: 1990137067 Pages: 98 Publication Date: 05 May 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsCeleste Snowber is a creative dynamo encompassing music and dance into her poetry in such a way that it echoes with a a myriad of emotions reflecting like a mirror in which we can see our own heart and soul. The Marrow of Longing is a gentle generational walk down a highway of smiles and tears that weaves us into Snowber's blanket of lyric and dance that permeate the fabric of relationships and life. The words and emotions in this mix of free verse and prose poetry dance with eloquent ease to the surreal symphony they evoke in the reader's mind. Candice James, Poet Laureate Emerita, New Westminster, BC and author of Rithimus Aeternam Harrowing, beautiful and surprising...through her exquisite capacity to listen, Celeste shows us person & place, land & love, all that is treasured beyond time, can be discovered within the living heart. It is clear to me that these poems are made with the soles of her bare feet, listening. John Fox The Healing Art of Poem-Making I savored this volume with its carefully constructed fragments about identity, food and longing, all of them representations of love and wisdom. A morsel of joy. Lola Koundakjian Author of The Moon in the Cusp of My Hand In this period of tremendous loss for the Armenian nation, it's good to see that our artists continue to so carefully share our complex and unresolved history through their personal journeys. Atom Egoyan, Film Director, Writer, Producer Celeste Snowber's The Marrow of Longing is a liminal site where land, food, bodysoul, the domestic, and the wild intermesh. These poems celebrate the succulent riches of Armenian cuisine in a tradition where food-making and artmaking are one, the kitchen a studio holding an eggplant's ""plum black"" richness. Readers are invited to open hearts and minds to the intergenerational traumas of the Armenian genocide of 1915 while stepping into a world where an Armenian mother's sweeping of floors sweeps us into an ever present, enduring love. Susan McCaslin, Author of Into the Open: Poems New & Selected Here, held in the warm love of the familial kitchen and the embrace of earth longing, you can taste beneath the skin of black plum, experience sticky bursts of knowing dancing on your lips, and hear the grace in mother's admonishment of ""Do it again, sweep the floor with love."" Be swept into Snowber's embrace as she wraps you in voices, echoes and sighs, journeying us through heart and earth healings. While these poems share Snowber's cultural memory fragments, her words echo universal themes bringing us back to ourselves into the generational embodied cycle of mother, child, mother earth, child, repeating. We are reminded that love is created in making, through birthing, and Snowber generates love in the recursive process of helping us remember. Read and be reborn. Pauline Sameshima, Canada Research Chair, Poet and Artist Celeste Snowber is a creative dynamo encompassing music and dance into her poetry in such a way that it echoes with a a myriad of emotions reflecting like a mirror in which we can see our own heart and soul. The Marrow of Longing is a gentle generational walk down a highway of smiles and tears that weaves us into Snowber's blanket of lyric and dance that permeate the fabric of relationships and life. The words and emotions in this mix of free verse and prose poetry dance with eloquent ease to the surreal symphony they evoke in the reader's mind. Candice James, Poet Laureate Emerita, New Westminster, BC and author of Rithimus Aeternam Harrowing, beautiful and surprising...through her exquisite capacity to listen, Celeste shows us person & place, land & love, all that is treasured beyond time, can be discovered within the living heart. It is clear to me that these poems are made with the soles of her bare feet, listening. John Fox The Healing Art of Poem-Making I savored this volume with its carefully constructed fragments about identity, food and longing, all of them representations of love and wisdom. A morsel of joy. Lola Koundakjian Author of The Moon in the Cusp of My Hand In this period of tremendous loss for the Armenian nation, it's good to see that our artists continue to so carefully share our complex and unresolved history through their personal journeys. Atom Egoyan, Film Director, Writer, Producer Celeste Snowber's The Marrow of Longing is a liminal site where land, food, bodysoul, the domestic, and the wild intermesh. These poems celebrate the succulent riches of Armenian cuisine in a tradition where food-making and artmaking are one, the kitchen a studio holding an eggplant's plum black richness. Readers are invited to open hearts and minds to the intergenerational traumas of the Armenian genocide of 1915 while stepping into a world where an Armenian mother's sweeping of floors sweeps us into an ever present, enduring love. Susan McCaslin, Author of Into the Open: Poems New & Selected Here, held in the warm love of the familial kitchen and the embrace of earth longing, you can taste beneath the skin of black plum, experience sticky bursts of knowing dancing on your lips, and hear the grace in mother's admonishment of Do it again, sweep the floor with love. Be swept into Snowber's embrace as she wraps you in voices, echoes and sighs, journeying us through heart and earth healings. While these poems share Snowber's cultural memory fragments, her words echo universal themes bringing us back to ourselves into the generational embodied cycle of mother, child, mother earth, child, repeating. We are reminded that love is created in making, through birthing, and Snowber generates love in the recursive process of helping us remember. Read and be reborn. Pauline Sameshima, Canada Research Chair, Poet and Artist Author InformationCeleste Nazeli Snowber, PhD is a dancer, poet, writer, award-winning educator and Professor in the Faculty of Education at Simon Fraser University. Celeste creates site-specific performance and has been the Artist in Residence in the University of British Columbia Botanical Garden creating full-length performances connecting poetry and dance out of each season. Celeste also creates one-woman shows integrating voice, comedy, and dance and has performed across North America and Internationally in a variety of venues, including concerts, galleries, museums, conferences and outdoor spaces. Celeste's mother was born in Historic Armenia in 1912 before immigrating to Boston and integral to Celeste's own artistic process is excavating fragments of ancestral memory, which find their way in poems and dances. She can be found at www.celestesnowber.com Boston-based artist and MFA, Marsha Nouritza Odabashian's drawings and paintings uniquely reflect the tension and expansiveness of being raised in dual cultures, Armenian and American. As a young child, she watched her mother cultivate the Armenian tradition of dyeing eggs red by boiling them in onion skins. In her work, vignettes of current events, history and social justice emerge from the onionskin dye on paper, stretched canvas or compressed cellulose sponge. Odabashian studies early and medieval Armenian art and architecture at Tufts University with Professor Christina Maranci, with whom she traveled to Aght'amar and Ani in Historic Armenia. Pairing her ancestral past with the present in her art is her means of fulfillment. She can be found at www.marshaodabashian.com. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||