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Invocation to Daughters: City Lights Spotlight No. 16
Contributor(s): Reyes, Barbara Jane (Author)

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ISBN: 0872867471     ISBN-13: 9780872867475
Publisher: City Lights Books
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Binding Type: Paperback
Published: October 2017
Qty:

Click for more in this series: City Lights Spotlight
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Poetry | American - Asian American
- Poetry | Women Authors
- Poetry | Subjects & Themes - Family
Dewey: 811.6
LCCN: 2017023929
Series: City Lights Spotlight
Physical Information: 0.4" H x 5.4" W x 6.8" L (0.25 lbs) 96 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Asian
- Sex & Gender - Feminine
- Topical - Family
Features: Price on Product
Review Citations: Publishers Weekly 10/16/2017
Library Journal 11/15/2017 pg. 83
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

2018 California Book Award Finalist

Feminist experimental poetry in the tradition of Audre Lorde and Theresa Kyung Cha from a prominent Filipina American poet.

Reyes writes with conviction about the various ways imperialism transforms women into 'capital, collateral, damaged soul.' However, the women that appear throughout the book are not merely victims; in Reyes's radical cosmology, these women--these daughters--are rebels, saints, revolutionaries, and torchbearers, 'sharp-tongued, willful.' This book is a call to arms against oppressive languages, systems, and traditions.--Publishers Weekly, starred review

Infused with Spanish and Tagalog, Reyes's beautiful, angry verse shines throughout. For a wide range of readers.--Library Journal, starred review

I cannot shout 'brilliant' loud enough. Start to this finish, Invocation to Daughters is truth. 'I am not your ethnic spectacle. I am not your cultural poverty. You / don't get to frame me.' This is a book you read and teach and live.--Anthony Cody, author of Borderland Apocrypha

Invocation to Daughters is a book of prayers, psalms, and odes for Filipina girls and women trying to survive and make sense of their own situations. Writing in an English inflected with Tagalog and Spanish, in meditations on the relationship between fathers and daughters and impassioned pleas on behalf of victims of brutality, Barbara Jane Reyes unleashes the colonized tongue in a lyrical feminist broadside written from a place of shared humanity.

Praise for Invocation to Daughters:

Against violence against women, Barbara Jane Reyes rips and runs, jumping off Audre Lorde's 'the master's tools will never dismantle the master's house, ' Invocation to Daughters recombines registers--prayers, pleas and elegy--braiding a trilingual triple-threat, a 3-pronged poetics that enjambs and reconfigures the formal with the street, utterance with erasure, the prose sentence with the liminal. Invocation to Daughters reminds me of the 70's in the East Bay, when Jessica Hagedorn met Ntozake Shange and ignited a green flash seen from horizon to horizon. Barbara Jane Reyes is one of the Bay Area's incendiary voices.--Sesshu Foster, author of ELADATL

Invocation to Daughters is a space for multitudes, a hypnotic collection that draws from family history--particularly the complex cultural gendered dynamic between father and daughter--in order to create a manual for emancipation from the interior and exterior binds that keep us from ourselves. Through prayers, calls to actions, and testimonies, Reyes invents 'a language so that we know ourselves, so that we may sing, and tell, and pray.'--Carmen Gim nez Smith, author of Be Recorder and Cruel Futures

 
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