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Dub: Finding Ceremony [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 277 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 544 g, 30 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Feb-2020
  • Kirjastus: Duke University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1478005416
  • ISBN-13: 9781478005414
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 277 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 544 g, 30 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Feb-2020
  • Kirjastus: Duke University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1478005416
  • ISBN-13: 9781478005414
Teised raamatud teemal:
"In DUB Alexis Pauline Gumbs continues with the third book in her poetry series, the first two books being Spill, inspired by Hortense Spillers, and M Archive, inspired by Jacqui Alexander. Whereas Spill deals with the contemporary afterlives of slavery and M Archive describes the post-dated evidence of our imminent apocalypse, DUB destroys Gumbs' own origin story, as she questions the assumptions and histories she has held onto most of her life. This text, through engagement with Sylvia Wynter's rigor, reinvents language outside of personal histories. DUB is organized into topical sections, where spacious prose poems animate the voice of an underwater chorus in ceremonies that flow into one another. Beginning a daily writing practice, Gumbs wrote DUB based on moments of emphasis in Sylvia Wynter's essays (and one interview over several decades). This book is influenced by the promiscuity and prolificity of dub music, the confrontational home-grown intimacy of dub poetry, and the descendants of this work. Dub uses the impact of repetition and the incantatory power of the spoken broken word. Gumbs uses dub to emphasize that Sylvia Wynter learned every colonial language and came to the conclusion that the ways of thinking that made colonialism and slavery imaginable were constructed over time and heretical to the ways of thinking that came before them; and so it must be possible to construct ways to understand life and place differently now as well. Gumbs goes back to the origin stories that precede her and turns the blood into paint, emphasizing that "then" is also "now" through the broken and intense voices of ancestors. Inspired by Wynter's heretical poetic action against our deepest beliefs, DUB is an artifact and tool for breath retraining and interspecies ancestral listening. Throughout the text, listening includes speakers who have never been considered human: whales and algae. Gumbs is attentive to kindred beyond taxonomy, questioning kinship loyalty, and suggests that our perceived survival needs are responses to a story we made up and told ourselves was written by our genes, a story that can be changed. This book will be of interest to scholars of African-American studies, diaspora studies, feminism, queer theory, English, creative writing and poetry"--

The concluding volume in a poetic triptych, Alexis Pauline Gumbs's Dub: Finding Ceremony takes inspiration from theorist Sylvia Wynter, dub poetry, and ocean life to offer a catalog of possible methods for remembering, healing, listening, and living otherwise.

The concluding volume in a poetic trilogy, Alexis Pauline Gumbs's Dub: Finding Ceremony takes inspiration from theorist Sylvia Wynter, dub poetry, and ocean life to offer a catalog of possible methods for remembering, healing, listening, and living otherwise. In these prose poems, Gumbs channels the voices of her ancestors, including whales, coral, and oceanic bacteria, to tell stories of diaspora, indigeneity, migration, blackness, genius, mothering, grief, and harm. Tracing the origins of colonialism, genocide, and slavery as they converge in Black feminist practice, Gumbs explores the potential for the poetic and narrative undoing of the knowledge that underpins the concept of Western humanity. Throughout, she reminds us that dominant modes of being human and the oppression those modes create can be challenged, and that it is possible to make ourselves and our planet anew.

Arvustused

Grounded in orÍkÌ-like references to Sylvia Wynters oeuvre, Dub simultaneously contracts and expands to create a new form of proprioception, which allows us as a species, phantomed by the corrosive and lacerating actions of history, to locate ourselves in relation to other species, as well as within the time-space continuum of the yet to be, the now and the past. Part prayer, oration, exhortation, commentary and story, Dub amplifies ancestral voices to become mythopoesis in the making. - M. NourbeSe Philip, author of (Zong!) Offering a sweeping, thoughtful, and exquisite meditation on Sylvia Wynter's work, Alexis Pauline Gumbs's poetic engagement represents a new and unique way of encountering and paying homage to Black feminist theory and Black feminist theorists. A beautiful and graceful text, Dub will inspire readers to return to and to rethink Wynter's work and her place within African Diaspora studies, Caribbean studies, and Black feminist studies. - Lisa B. Thompson, author of (Single Black Female) "Breath is an important theme in Dub. As is gratitude in the face of environmental decline. Because our ancestors navigated so intimately through change, Gumbs sets out to prove, so can we. . . . [ An] exquisitely rendered love letter. . . ." - Ashia Ajani (Sierra) "People throw around terms like Genius and Magic frequently but if you open this book, flip to any passage, and dont feel moved from your soul then I will assume that you dont have one. 5 Stars aren't enough for this sacred text but it's all we got so . . . ." - Adrien Julious (Authentically Adrien blog) "I am so grateful that Alexis Pauline Gumbs listens to Black women writers and scholars the way that she does. . . . Dub is a book of our now. As tends to be the case with the books that Gumbs summons, the timing of Dub is prescient. With our breathless global attention set to registering the various way a virus connects all life forms, I cannot think of a better time for a book that tarries with and makes ceremony with Sylvia Wynter." - Tiffany Lethabo King (Antipode) "[ G]round-breaking. . . . Gumbss trilogy embraces the lyric beauty in the acts of naming, remembering, and finding ones way back to the source. . . . Reading Gumbss books feels like reading an archive that will someday, who knows maybe even someday soon, usher in an era of radical transformation." - Kathryn Nuernberger (West Branch) Both a gathering and a recovery, this last pivotal volume in a trilogy commits to a new poetics. . . . Dub wakes us concussively. Both wrenching and playful, it offers instructions (two sets of them), warnings, and its central bid to listen to the undrowned. - Susan McCabe (Los Angeles Review of Books)

A Note  ix
Request  1
Commitment  3
Instructions  5
Opening  7
Whale Chorus  15
Remembering  21
NunÁnuk  34
Boda  40
Anguilla  47
Another Set of Instructions  66
Red August  74
Relation  92
Prophet  94
And  110
Skin  114
Losing it All  120
It's Your Father  126
Edict  145
Edgegrove  153
Unlearning Herself  163
Birth Chorus  177
Conditions  194
Jamaica  199
Blood Chorus  202
Shop  214
Orchard  220
Cycle  227
Saving the Planet  231
Staying  239
Letting Go  246
Acknowledgments  253
Notes  261
Crate Dig  273
Alexis Pauline Gumbs is a poet, independent scholar, and activist. She is the author of Spill and M Archive, both also published by Duke University Press.