Bread and Circus
By (Author) Airea D. Matthews
Pan Macmillan
Picador
10th October 2023
8th June 2023
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary poetry (c 1900 onwards)
811.6
Paperback
112
Width 155mm, Height 197mm, Spine 13mm
184g
Formally ambidextrous, teethed with wit and uncompromising dignity." - Ocean Vuong Bread and Circus is a hybrid and palimpsestic memoir-in-verse: it combines poetry, photography and spectral imaging to explore the realities of economic necessity and marginal poverty through a personal lens. Examining the experience of the US urban Black community from a variety of perspectives, it draws heavily on the author's archival research on Adam Smith, the eighteenth-century Scottish economist, as well as his magnum opus, The Wealth of Nations. As the perspective shifts from watchful child, to teacher, mother, writer and citizen, Bread and Circus asks what it is to have survived, indeed to have flourished, and at what cost.
"This book enacts, with tenderness and intelligence, an erudition that matches the capacious love of its ambitions. Formally ambidextrous, teethed with wit and uncompromising dignity, Matthews engages the archive as a breathing document, refusing to let history be done with itself, and thereby accomplishes what I love most about poetry especially hersthat it lives, is living." -- Ocean Vuong
"Matthews's writing is bold, innovative and complex." * Washington Post *
"Matthews is virtuosic, frantic, and darkly, very darkly, funny." * New Yorker *
"Matthews has earned a place in the accomplished company of Adrienne Rich and Muriel Rukeyser." * Booklist *
Airea D. Matthews is Philadelphia's current poet laureate. Her first collection of poems, the critically acclaimed Simulacra, won the 2016 Yale Series of Younger Poets Award. Her work has appeared in The New York Times, Gulf Coast, VQR, Best American Poets, American Poet, LitHub, Harvard Review, and elsewhere. Matthews holds a BA in economics from the University of Pennsylvania as well as an MFA from the Helen Zell Writers' Program and an MPA from the Gerald Ford School of Public Policy, both at the University of Michigan. A Pew fellow, she is a professor and directs the poetry program at Bryn Mawr College.