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Wet Apples, White Blood
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 91

Wet Apples, White Blood

Naomi Guttman's new poetry collection was inspired by the role of nursing in human evolution and culture. The first cycle of poems, "Wet Apples, White Blood," offers lyric glimpses into archetypes of breastfeeding women in history and myth. The dramatic action in the second cycle, "Galactopoesis," centers around the experience of a mother whose young child is hospitalized. Galactopoesis is the medical term for the continued secretion and production of milk. It derives from the Greek radicals for 'milk' (galacto) and 'making' (poesis), which is also 'poetry.' In Wet Apples, White Blood, nursing, as a constant creative act dependent on the baby's demand, is a trope for the creative process and for questions of biology, psychology, and spirituality.

Authenticity in the Kitchen
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 455

Authenticity in the Kitchen

The Oxford Symposium on Food on Cookery is a premier English conference on this topic. The subjects range from the food of medieval English and Spanish Jews; wild boar in Europe; the identity of liquamen and other Roman sauces; the production of vinegar in the Philippines; the nature of Indian restaurant food; and food in 19th century Amsterdam.

Cast from Bells
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 76

Cast from Bells

Subtle and surprising poems connecting the use of bells in wartime with shifts in the nature of affection.

A Lovely Gutting
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 100

A Lovely Gutting

Salvaging beauty from grief's wreckage in the towns and wilds of post-cod Newfoundland.

The Little Yellow House
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 100

The Little Yellow House

Silent echoes of memories forgotten.

Blindfold
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 107

Blindfold

Blinded by a grenade in Lebanon as a teenager, poet John Asfour came to Canada armed with James Joyce's words, "For the eyes, they bring us nothing. I have a hundred worlds to create and I am only losing one of them." Blindfold investigates the ways in which disability influences our lives and is magnified in our minds. In a series of thematically linked poems, Asfour draws the metaphor of the blindfold across the eyes of sighted citizens who are impaired by estrangement, emotional complexity, and social pressures. A sense of exile and belonging dominates the poems, following the journey of a blind man whose life in his new land has been hampered by prejudice and barriers to communication. Exposing the rich and surprising possibilities of a life that has undergone a frightening transformation, Blindfold relates feelings of loss, displacement, and disorientation experienced not only by the disabled but by everyone who finds themselves separated from the norm.

Mosaic Orpheus
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 191

Mosaic Orpheus

Maturing reflections on a changing world.

Particles
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 107

Particles

"There's a gap between where / an electron is and where it might be / and that's the only real work-place. / You occupy that office of possibility." Where are you in that space between the electron and the galaxy, and how do you find yourself there? Particles asks this question and answers it by asking more questions, conveying both the mystery and the uncertainty of the universe.

Offal: Rejected and Reclaimed Food
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 400

Offal: Rejected and Reclaimed Food

Contains the proceedings from the 2016 Oxford Symposium on Food & Cookery focusing on offal.

Classicisms in the Black Atlantic
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 353

Classicisms in the Black Atlantic

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2020
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Classicisms in the Black Atlantic explores how black authors and artists in the Atlantic world have shaped and reshaped the cultural legacies of classical antiquity from the aftermath of slavery up to the present day to represent black voices and experiences, often revealing in the process effaced black presences in classical antiquity.