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Isthmus to Abya Yala: City Lights Spotlight Series #23

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Isthmus to Abya Yala: City Lights Spotlight Series #23

Contributors:

By (Author) Roberto Harrison

ISBN:

9780872869110

Publisher:

City Lights Books

Imprint:

City Lights Books

Publication Date:

10th July 2024

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

811.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

88

Dimensions:

Width 139mm, Height 177mm

Description

A conjuration of ancient consciousness aimed at rehumanizing our contemporary cyborg condition.

These writings surge as blinding alchemical tales, unified, by language wrought in a psychic molecular forge.Will Alexander, author of Divine Blue Light (for John Coltrane)

Abya Yalaland of life or land of vital bloodis a Pre-Columbian term of the Guna people of Panam and Colombia to refer to the American continent and more recently has signified the idea of a decolonized New World among various Indigenous movements. In Isthmus to Abya Yala, the latest volume of his ongoing series Tropical Lung, Panamanian American poet Roberto Harrison summons a mythic consciousness in response to this political and spiritual struggle.

In his poems, with mystic fervor, Harrison finds phonetic unities concealing conceptual oppositions he must transcend. Invoking mobilian as a ur-language against racism and toward an all-inclusive humanityin opposition to the mobile of phone-mediated existencethe poems of Isthmus to Abya Yala burn with a visionary ardor that overpowers rationality through an intensive accumulation of imagery. They even sometimes manifest as visual poems in the form of drawings he calls Tecs, opposing the dominance of technology to the advocacy of pan-Indian nationhood by 19th century Shawnee leader Tecumseh. Tecumseh Republic is the poets name for a new post-racial, post-national, post-binary, post-colonial, holistic and earth-oriented society with no national borders, with Panam as its only entry and exit. In the manifesto-like panam is my home in the darkness, he declares himself a citizen of the Tecumseh Republic, even as he acknowledges the specificity of his origins: all of my books are about Panam in some way.

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