NAUTILIDAEISM
nacreous, chambered
isolation
ya mawlana antas-salam.
buoyant in bondage,
wa minkas-salam.
spiralled aortal
filtration
wa ilayka yarji-us-salam.
shearing radula: cascading
sight
hayina rab-bana bis-salam.
aloft, enclosed and
boneless,
wa adkhilna daras-salam.
From
“queer femme writer, multimedia artist, editor, musician, performer and SciComm
advocate: Rasiqra Revulva comes the full-length debut Cephalopography 2.0
(Hamilton ON: Wolsak and Wynn, 2020), an explosive follow-up to her two chapbooks
of “glitch-illustrated poetry” Cephalopography (Toronto ON: words(on)pages
press, 2016) and If You Forget the Whipped Cream, You’re No Good As A Woman (Toronto
ON: Gap Riot Press, 2018). Rife with drawings, computer-generated illustrations
and texts, puzzles, prayer, visual poems and a variety of writing forms, the
work in Cephalopography 2.0 is energetic and wonderfully playful,
vibrant and performative. Revulva is, as the back cover attests, “as much a
passionate celebration of cephalopods in all their plurality and finery as it
is a collection of poems exploring human identity and experience through the
lens of these marine animals. These experiments with traditional poetic forms
such as ghazals, tankas and cinquains, as well as more contemporary forms, make
poems that are uniquely and beautifully composed.” And a cephalopod, by the
way: think of such as a squid, octopus, cuttlefish, or nautilus. As her poem “CEPHALOPOGRAPHY”
offers: “A body that aches (of water). A body that moults (of salt). A body
that mistakes / (of flesh). A body that revolts (without). A body that splits
(of water). A body that / swarms (gestalt). A body that exits (the water). A body
that transforms (at fault).” Hers is a joyous performance, a book-length suite
of revelations on conditions of living, one clearly shared by humans and
cephalopods alike.
Listen
to the multiple engagements and play within a poem such as “BREEDING GROUNDS: /
EMTPY CALORIES,” that reads: “so much depends / upon/ the Greenland shark /
grinding / its toxic jaws / into / a / gaunt polar / bear [.]” As she discussed
her debut chapbook, which held an earlier iteration of this current project, in an interview with Canisia Lubrin at The Town Crier in 2017:
My debut chapbook Cephalopography
is a multi-form exploration of various axes of human identities and experiences
through the lens of cephalopods and their environments; aka an illustrated
celebration of my imaginary best friends. It is composed of multiple poetic
forms, an insert of interactive puzzles, and a series of glitch-art cephalopod
illustrations/reverse ekphrases. Dive in, and don’t forget to breathe.
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