‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade

Amidst a growing consensus amongst critics that a discussion on race and white privilege in British poetry is long overdue, few have theorized on race and racism in relation to contemporary British BAME poets and their concomitant poetics. In being attentive to how BAME poets continue to be routinel...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mary Jean Chan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2020-04-01
Series:Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://poetry.openlibhums.org/article/id/745/
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spelling doaj-802c53c72e704cc7adcdcba8cf5031fc2021-06-17T14:52:58ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesJournal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry1758-972X2020-04-0112110.16995/bip.745‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of JadeMary Jean Chan0Royal Holloway, University of LondonAmidst a growing consensus amongst critics that a discussion on race and white privilege in British poetry is long overdue, few have theorized on race and racism in relation to contemporary British BAME poets and their concomitant poetics. In being attentive to how BAME poets continue to be routinely othered by various critics, I will reflect upon my positionality as a BAME poet-critic who considers literary criticism to be a crucial means to respond to exemplary work being produced by contemporary British BAME poets, with the aim of disseminating contemporary BAME poetry in forums which are less welcoming to non-white or non-Eurocentric voices and perspectives. This article will examine whether parody can be construed as a form of resistance, which can be deployed to counter racialized/racist notions of difficulty, readability and authenticity. As the case study of my exploration of contemporary British-Chinese poetry, Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade will be closely read to illuminate the inextricable 'connection between texts and the existential actualities of human life, politics, societies and events' (Said 1983). Through offering a textual analysis of Howe’s collection with due attention to her politics and poetics, I aim to reveal how Loop of Jade has broadened the definition of linguistic innovation in contemporary British poetry and practice through its scintillating use of parody and hybrid poetics.https://poetry.openlibhums.org/article/id/745/Sarah Howelyricavant-gardepoeticsracedifficulty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mary Jean Chan
spellingShingle Mary Jean Chan
‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade
Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry
Sarah Howe
lyric
avant-garde
poetics
race
difficulty
author_facet Mary Jean Chan
author_sort Mary Jean Chan
title ‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade
title_short ‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade
title_full ‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade
title_fullStr ‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade
title_full_unstemmed ‘Journeying is Hard’ : Difficulty, Race and Poetics in Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade
title_sort ‘journeying is hard’ : difficulty, race and poetics in sarah howe’s loop of jade
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry
issn 1758-972X
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Amidst a growing consensus amongst critics that a discussion on race and white privilege in British poetry is long overdue, few have theorized on race and racism in relation to contemporary British BAME poets and their concomitant poetics. In being attentive to how BAME poets continue to be routinely othered by various critics, I will reflect upon my positionality as a BAME poet-critic who considers literary criticism to be a crucial means to respond to exemplary work being produced by contemporary British BAME poets, with the aim of disseminating contemporary BAME poetry in forums which are less welcoming to non-white or non-Eurocentric voices and perspectives. This article will examine whether parody can be construed as a form of resistance, which can be deployed to counter racialized/racist notions of difficulty, readability and authenticity. As the case study of my exploration of contemporary British-Chinese poetry, Sarah Howe’s Loop of Jade will be closely read to illuminate the inextricable 'connection between texts and the existential actualities of human life, politics, societies and events' (Said 1983). Through offering a textual analysis of Howe’s collection with due attention to her politics and poetics, I aim to reveal how Loop of Jade has broadened the definition of linguistic innovation in contemporary British poetry and practice through its scintillating use of parody and hybrid poetics.
topic Sarah Howe
lyric
avant-garde
poetics
race
difficulty
url https://poetry.openlibhums.org/article/id/745/
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