Sweet Movie: Poems
By (Author) Alisha Dietzman
Foreword by Victoria Chang
8
Beacon Press
Beacon Press
14th November 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
Literature: history and criticism
Religion and beliefs
811.6
Paperback
96
Width 140mm, Height 216mm, Spine 7mm
108g
"What gives us the right to listen to someone else's body" -Alisha Dietzman, from Sweet Movie A National Poetry Series winner selected by Victoria Chang, Sweet Movie confronts romantic and religious masochism to interrogate spiritual, sexual, and moral agency Sweet Movie's love poems and ekphrasis echo splintered versions of the same question- how do we navigate a world where the expectations of our performance-our presentation, our means of existence-are dictated by the viewers themselves Mirroring the uncertain, unstable tenor of Dusan Makavajev's controversial avant-garde film Sweet Movie (1974), the voices in Sweet Movie are equal parts docile, feverish, and violent. This collection reimagines a feminist approach to religious masochism to explore the ways women are denied agency by both their faith communities and by outsiders. Dietzman's poems move through locations across Central Europe and the American South. Each new landscape informs the next- Memphis appears in Berlin in the form of a dead deer, and Southern syntax haunts an elegy for Gustavs Klucis. The inspired poems from Sweet Movie use film and art to break open seeing. What results are deeply insightful and spacious poems of faith, displacement, and love. Perpetually observant, Sweet Movie guardedly but desperately consumes a world that has become unsettling and uncertain.
I didnt expect the desert, its longform, writes Alisha Dietzman in her lustrous debut Sweet Movie, a collection centered around ekphrasis. TV, movies, the self, even art and religion, serve as mediums on which the speaker casts the light of consciousness in her search for meaning. Despite the spectrum of experience presented, this is a poetry that proves, At our vertices: God.
Quan Barry, author of Auction: Poems
The scene opens to a person teetering on a high wire between two trees in a forest that used to be a city. Below, another person gathers a host of paintings that once hung in a museum that no longer exists in the city that used to be a city. That person looks up, knowing that civilization is over, knowing that they love that person on the high wire, and that something new is only just beginning. Thats the movie I would make of Sweet Moviea taut and haunting book of love and faith when, all around us, hate and nihilism crowd in.
Philip Metres, author of Shrapnel Maps
The poems in Sweet Movie are wrought with beauty and being in the world.
Victoria Chang
Alisha Dietzman is a PhD candidate in Divinity focusing on aesthetics and ethics at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, supported by a grant from the US-UK Fulbright Commission. Her chapbook, Slow Motion Something For No Reason, was the editors' choice selection for the Tomaz Salamun Prize. Her poetry has appeared in Ploughshares, Chicago Review, Denver Quarterly, and The Iowa Review. Raised between Columbia, South Carolina, and Prague, Czech Republic, Dietzman now works as a bartender and server in Sacramento, California.