Collect Inclined To Speak: An Anthology Of Contemporary Arab American Poetry Imagined By Hayan Charara Disseminated As Script

pungent, traumatic, necessary. If you believe yourself to be a poet, you must make yourself a place amongst these authors, as they are defining poetry for a great deal of the world and a great many peoples experience.


I have been reading this book for weeks now, and not because I couldnt finish it sooner or it was slow or for any of these common reasons.
It was actually because it was impossible, physically impossible, to ingest more than a handful of poems at a time.
The ways in which these writers communicated survival, rebirth, fear, devotion, fury and futility was something that resonated so severely that it was physical for me.
I will put an excerpt below but only something very light because I feel that everyone who reads this should have their own physical, intimate experience with it.


So often it is easy to live amidst worlds of fiction to write it, to love it, to honestly need it to survive.
That is exactly why we love books, However, that is why we should listen to this one, These poets reach out and implore that those who have the means to should not simply live lives of convenience.
Whether it is just turning off the news to avoid the reality of global suffering, or even a refusal to engage in basic humanitarian issues.
Comfort is illusionary complacency can be dangerous, Certainly none of us need an anthology of poetry to remind us of that, but an entire, quite dense, anthology sweeping Arab American and Arab American immigrant experience can't hurt.
I think the reason this book is so crucial is that we often read a work by, say for example, a Lebanese writer or a writer of any nationality other than our own I am using Lebanese here because this is an anthology of Arab American writers and many are Lebanese.
After doing so, feel as though we understand the entire situation in that region, We even often emotionally connect to it perhaps without a true understanding of the disparate and complex realities that make up many people, who often get collapsed into the same place.
However, I believe a more truer understanding comes within the pages of this book, an understanding of many people who have fought not to be homogenized.
In this dense volume you have to face the wound of this entire geography, it's rawness and both the passion and the horror that nearly all nations of the world have participated in, either through action or passivity.


I will teach my students this in the fall as I don't believe these are words whose echoes should be lost.
Actually, this anthology includes an artist and acquaintance of mine, Suheir Hammad, whose oral poetry I use in nearly all of my classes and whos poetry and other work I highly recommend.
We have a responsibility to these voices even
Collect Inclined To Speak: An Anthology Of Contemporary Arab American Poetry Imagined By Hayan Charara Disseminated As Script
if we are one of them to carry their realities to those who may be shut off from this reality.
I hope that many of you will spend time letting this text talk to you, and listen while it talks to itself.
It will not only be worth it, it will redesign you,

Again, I would like to put a few light lines that dont go to heavily into many of the issues the texts attacks.
Those I hope you will find out for yourself, . .

from “Relics” by Matthew Shenoda

, . . ”We are a memory shaped by vertebrae
Clappers of rhythm disassembled by the skeletons of time
We are the dissipating cartilage of our greatgrandchildrens memory holding to their sockets by a sinew of hope
Making sense of these bones we reassemble history
Making ancestral tapestries in the shape of retaining walls
We are a memory shaped by vertebrae
Clappers of rhythm disassembled by the skeletons of time

You are the skin behind the clouds.




While the quote below was not from one of the poems itself, it was a preemptive quote to “Roots” by Sharif S.
Elmusa, and I found it profoundly appropriate to the collection:

“Home is where people can read your name correctly on your tombstone.
” Attila Jozsef First I should say, regarding all of the anthologies I am teaching this semester, I have not been reading each of them in their entirety except for June Jordan's SOULSCRIPT.
That said, I am really moved so far by Hayan Charara's introduction to this collection, As with Francisco Aragon and THE WIND SHIFTS, I appreciate Charara's transparency in discussing his process of selection of work and poets.
I especially appreciate his discussions of the label of Arab American identity being shifting, problematic, political, and that like it or not, these Arab American poets are political, if only because they are emerging in public as writers/authors at a time in history in which "Arab" is being pushed to the forefront of our international consciousness in extreme and dangerous ways.


While Orientalist depictions of the Other are nothing new, this post/, current wave of Islamaphobia and antiArab hate is widespread and pervasive.
Hence, the sharp importance of a poetic project dealing with identity politics, and contesting identity politics, The poets Charara has selected is multigenerational and international/diasporic, as well as aesthetically diverse, From the spare lines of Sinan Antoon, to the "performative" quality and vernacular of Suheir Hammad, to the musicality of Matthew Shenoda, to the "experimentalism" of Etel Adnan, I think Charara tries his best to include poems which speak on a macro level as well as from a lyric I POV, and not privileging one aesthetic sensibility over another.
He also acknowledges where he perceives this project as potentially falling short, with regards to queer studies and feminist theory.
This here though, he sees as Arab American poetics being "ripe for criticism," for expanding upon in subsequent projects,

Ultimately, what I appreciate most about this collection is that Charara states this about political poetry: these are poems which embrace this reality, however gruesome, hopeless, joyous, and from these, give us poems which are life affirming.
Read for class, with one of the best teachers ever, Indeed. There were some really amazing poems in this book, I loved the variety of topics and styles,

A very good collection of ArabAmerican poems,
I think the two important poets I knew from this anthology were: Mohja Kahf and Etel Adnan, I'm planning to read most of their work especially novels and short stories,

People who truly LOVE poetry will enjoy reading this,
I didn't enjoy it that much! Rich reading, What kind of poetry to expect in Inclined to Speak

Expect reading about people who felt impelled to speakout of an often equivocal inner necessity.
As you read, expect to feel the disoriented, anxious, ungrounded and panicky sentences running on end without junctions: running thoughts and running people running minds.
People marginalized who found the oftenunheard voice on paper,

Expect to get lost between foreign parents and foreign cultures,
Expect to dislike the majority,
Expect to find solace only in nature,
Expect to remember your childhood,
Expect sarcasm, wit and honesty,

Poems here deal with ArabAmerican personas struggle as “exiles” in the United States, Their poetry voices their memories of childhood, nostalgia for a seemingly nonexistent place to call home, nature as a refuge, sarcasm and wit as a way of criticism, nonbelonging neither here nor there, nonrootedness as ethnics and energetically out of touch with reality, untimely death, terrorism, uncertainty of life and many more.
This was my first real introduction to "Arab American" contemporary poetry, though I hesitate to give it that title, The implications of such a title seem to limit the poems within to being about the experience of Arab Americans as Arab Americans, rather than as men, women, LGBTQ, Muslims, Christians, mothers, sons, etc.
as people.

While many of the poems in this anthology are about the intersection of culture and race, the stories, experiences, and ideas of these poets are not limited to their identity as Arab Americans and should not be viewed as such.
Rather, this is one of the ways for these historically underrepresented artists to continue to make names for themselves in the world of contemporary poetry.
Definitely worth your time.

One of my favorite poems was "My Grandmother Washes her Feet in the Bathroom Sink at Sears," by Mohja Kahf.
At no other time in American history has our imagination been so engrossed with the Arab experience, An indispensable and historic volume, Inclined to Speak gathers together poems, from the most important contemporary Arab American poets, that shape and alter our understanding of this experience.
These poems also challenge us to reconsider what it means to be American, Impressive in its scope, this book provides readers with an astonishing array of poetic sensibilities, touching on every aspect of the human condition.
Whether about culture, politics, loss, art, or language itself, the poems here engage these themes with originality, dignity, and an unyielding need not only to speak, but also to be heard.
Here are thirtynine poets offering uppoems, Included in the anthology are Naomi Shihab Nye, Samuel Hazo, D, H. Melhem, Lawrence Joseph, Khaled Mattawa, Mohja Khaf, Matthew Shenoda, Kazim Ali, Nuar Alsadir, Fady Joudah, and Lisa Suhair Majaj, Charara has written a lengthy introduction about the state of Arab American poetry in the country today and short biographies of the poets and provided an extensive list of further readings.
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