that none of the women
here
are sick with.
May God heal us.
Today it was today I thought
of the smooth cheek skin and aquiline nose of a person
In the morning I had a
belief in her.
I had other beliefs
this morning I did not express.
And I lost the doctrine
that my dreams provided me with,
this morning.
(“Girliness is a North American affectation”)
From
Toronto poet and performer Aisha Sasha John comes her second trade poetry
collection, THOU (Toronto ON:
BookThug, 2014), close on the heels of her first, The Shining Material (BookThug, 2011). A book of meditative chant,
sing-song patter and performance lyric, THOU
is a collection of poetry shaped around a pronoun, inquiring, shaking and
prodding and shattering. The two sections that make up the collection—“Physical”
and “The book of you”—are self-described by the author as being two long poems,
both of which are composed of accumulated lyric fragments of titled and untitled
poem-shards that speak, accuse, question, shout out loud and often require if
not outright demand the reader to respond. “I have to report something
physically uncomfortable.” she writes, early on in the collection. “I said No,
but I have to tell you – it’s ‘cause of physical reasons. / The inside of which
is sticky.” There is something compelling about the way John discusses female
beauty and the conflict of impossible cultural standards set upon women in such
an open and even humourous way, managing to bring forth a conversation. Indeed,
this is a very physical book. “The good and medium ass,” she writes, towards
the beginning of “Physical,” “the long and medium waist // of a man. // The bit
of back fat that romances his crisp shirt.” Later on, she writes:
I like to think of my
body as a garment.
I have borrowed my
body.
It means I need all
afternoon to think every day.
That’s what it means.
It means money looks
like movement.
I have to think about
existence every fucking day.
And I am unwasteful.
If I don’t consider the day how can I live in it.
I see the contents of
the day I see instruments of the moment.
Often these are
physical objects.
Often these are trees,
and bushes, and bushes
and trees.
I consider the objects
in the day.
I consider the
distances between bodies.
If I am the same as
other people, why don’t they like poetry. I love poetry.
If I am the same as
other people, why don’t they like poetry. I love poetry.
And I am the same as
other people. I’ve checked. (“Okay I skimmed the book; that’s enough.”)
This
book is almost built as a call-and-response or a conversation, as John engages
a series of ideas and cultures through speaking directly to the external “thou”
and internal monologues. As she writes in the second section: “I wanted to tell
you some secrets. / I want a different relationship with my stories.” There is
something of the collage to the way in which John has composed her THOU, two sections of
poems-as-accumulation, structurally akin to works by Canadian poets Phil Hall
and Dennis Cooley, as well as American poet Kate Greenstreet, for the sake of
their books each managing to be a kind of catch-all, yet maintaining a
coherence that almost belies what each work actually contains. This is a book
that works to engage with the world, the body, the self and the other,
including the darker elements of such engagements. As John writes, deep in the first
section, near the middle of the collection: “I am weary / at the future. / I am
always interested in things; it will never stop. / I can plump minutes with my
always interest. / but I am weary.”
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