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We remain traditional : poems / Sylvia Chan.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Publication details: Fort Collins, Colorado : The Center for Literary Publishing, Colorado State University, (c)2018.Description: 1 online resource (91 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781885635600
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • PS3603 .W474 2018
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
Contents:
Subject: "In We Remain Traditional, Sylvia Chan juxtaposes the elegy, the conflict, and the brashness of a relationship that summons wild musicality in its love and frustration. Through the speaker and Adam, the beloveds offer thirty-two consolations for the gendered history of Chinese American women--a break and affirmation of their traditions. What saves these two characters is their music--a peace treaty for the book's form or 'fractured paradise,' a language that protects and protests their bodies in Oakland, California. Marked by vulnerability and intimacy, Chan interrogates a young woman's childhood sexual abuse. In the vein of Stacy Doris and Paul Celan, Chan asks: because she is a child of violent tradition, what is her visceral grief? This is a speaker who aspires to create universal experiences for her listeners, to transform jazz into narrative. This is a wild, beautiful, and ambitious first book: Chan refuses to apologize for the terror in her conviction and compassion. To choose a man who is behind her sexual, psychological, and political exploitation is to forgive his narcissism, aggression, and addiction. To love, simply, is to live unafraid of pushing boundaries and of being happy"--Provided by publisher.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number URL Status Date due Barcode
Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) Online Book (LOGIN USING YOUR MY CIU LOGIN AND PASSWORD) G. Allen Fleece Library ONLINE Non-fiction PS3603.35585 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Link to resource Available on1004981816

Includes bibliographies and index.

"In We Remain Traditional, Sylvia Chan juxtaposes the elegy, the conflict, and the brashness of a relationship that summons wild musicality in its love and frustration. Through the speaker and Adam, the beloveds offer thirty-two consolations for the gendered history of Chinese American women--a break and affirmation of their traditions. What saves these two characters is their music--a peace treaty for the book's form or 'fractured paradise,' a language that protects and protests their bodies in Oakland, California. Marked by vulnerability and intimacy, Chan interrogates a young woman's childhood sexual abuse. In the vein of Stacy Doris and Paul Celan, Chan asks: because she is a child of violent tradition, what is her visceral grief? This is a speaker who aspires to create universal experiences for her listeners, to transform jazz into narrative. This is a wild, beautiful, and ambitious first book: Chan refuses to apologize for the terror in her conviction and compassion. To choose a man who is behind her sexual, psychological, and political exploitation is to forgive his narcissism, aggression, and addiction. To love, simply, is to live unafraid of pushing boundaries and of being happy"--Provided by publisher.

Cover; Contents; ONE; Devotion Song; TWO; Body Canopy; Piano Room; Anabatic Scat; Two Composers From Canton; One Eternal Drop of Gold; The Gravel is One More Thing to Pick Up; Or Else; Summertime; The Part About Fate or Counterpoint; THREE; Mine is Probably an Owl; Brief Aspirations of Love and Genealogy; The Strafing in My Biological Story; All of This to Adam; Unasylumed; It Happened by Accident; No Point in Lucid California; Heat Burst; In the Bellows; The Part About Sacral and Nerve or Temperament; The Part About Love or Cadence; FOUR; Virga; Formidable Handbook; Tues, Sept. 11; Prodrome

One Contour in the Narrative BreakBluesâ#x80;#x99; Uppermost Organism; In the Garden; Unasylumed, Unarchived; Vanity; Personal Concept; ONE*; Recapitulation; Notes; Acknowledgements

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