Divide and Rule
By (Author) Walid Bitar
Coach House Books
Coach House Books
24th July 2012
6th September 2012
Canada
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
811.54
Paperback
72
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
113g
"The empire's missing links are found deep in this poet's ever-astonishing states of multiple consciousnessastutely attuned to the pressured, violent, mass conformities forced upon usbrilliantly formed into poems as ambitious and achieved as any written in the English language today."Lawrence Joseph
In these dramatic monologues, Walid Bitar delivers variations on the theme of power: in politics, in the subjugation and abuse of other cultures, and in our divided selves. Using satire, parody, koan, and riddle, Divide and Rule struggles with the mendacity of language and identity.
They have no maps. Ours, I'll redraw.
Isn't itself, their neck of the woods,
needs a restsomething more than a nap,
and less than death, though death wouldn't hurt.
Walid Bitar's poetry collections include 2 Guys on Holy Land, Bastardi Puri, and The Empire's Missing Links. He was born in Beirut and lives in Toronto, Ontario.
'Daring, unique, passionate, challenging -- everything much of contemporary poetry is not ... Bitar's poems read like final communications from a dying vaudevillian, Morse code tap-danced on the coffin's lid.' -- Campbell McGrath 'Bitar's poetry jolts us into a new awareness of the world in which we live, and the poetry we read and write. It is new, both beautiful and ugly, and highly successful.' -- Indiana Review
Walid Bitar was born in Beirut in 1961. He immigrated to Canada in 1969. His previous poetry collections are Maps with Moving Parts (Brick, 1988), 2 Guys on Holy Land (Wesleyan University Press, 1993), Bastardi Puri (The Porcupine's Quill, 2005) and The Empire's Missing Links (Signal Editions/Vehicule, 2008). He was born in Beirut, Lebanon, and lives in Toronto.