PROM
I bought us pearl earrings for $5 from an
elderly vendor in Chinatown. I told him how neither of us had ever owned
anything pearl before. He knew they were fake, and so did I, and so did you,
but it didn’t matter. Later, you spilled Smirnoff all over the gown you
borrowed from your sister. I tried not to stare at the lace and sequins of your
bra seeping through the soaked fabric. Having eyes only for you is just a
glamorous way of saying that I am blind.
Following
the release of two poetry chapbooks through American chapbook publisher Dancing
Girl Press – THE AQUARIUM (2014) and THE GL.A.DE (2017) – Toronto poet Sennah Yee’s first full-length collection is How Do I Look? (Montreal QC: Metatron Press, 2017). How Do I Look? is a collection of short, self-contained,
observational prose-poems, a number of which reference a variety of degrees of sexual
and racial violence, from microagressions and offhanded comments to far, far
worse, and the ways in which women are required to constantly be on guard. The short
poem “MEDUSA,” for example, that opens the collection, reads:
Beauty, power, and confidence without gaze. Then,
a man holds up a mirror and kills her. There is nothing mythical about that.
Utilizing
a series of pop culture references, including an array of film titles as poem
titles, the poems in Yee’s How Do I Look?
are smart, wonderfully playful, precise and straightforward, all the while
shining a spotlight on some rather dark corners of how people insist on
treating each other. “I want to cry when locals ask me where I’m from,” she
writes, in the poem “SIEM REAP,” composing out a short tourist scene from Angkor
Wat, “because I know they are trying to bring me closer, not push me away.” In a 2016 interview over at Speaking of Marvels, she writes:
My writing’s evolved closer to creative
non-fiction, focusing on racism and sexism. I used to be too shy to write about
myself. Now I see value in narrativizing life events, even and perhaps
especially the ones that make me feel weak and/ or ugly. Being openly
vulnerable can feel very brave and strong. I feel like my writing’s become a
more accurate reflection of my identity. I was terrified at first to share my
short piece for Poor Claudia’s 10
Sources series about micro-aggressions and anxieties as a Chinese-Canadian
woman, but the response was touching and validating. It made me want to write
pieces that are more powerful and political in their honesty and anger. I want
my writing to wake people up.
The
poems in this collection feel intensely personal, and exist as a combination of
lyric essay, observational moment and condenced scene-study, and her writing
very much has the potential to do something absolutely incredible. I want to
see where else she goes.
No comments:
Post a Comment