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"Other" voices
teaching Kimiko Hahn's The unbearable heart
pp. 234-238
Abstrakt
The heart of Kimiko Hahns volume of poetry The Unbearable Heart is the daughter's grief over the death of her mother,1The Unbearable Heart opens with several short elegies narrating the pained response of the daughter-speaker to her mother's death, and ends with a poem in which the speaker creates a children's story about her mother's death as a retroactive "preparation" for this final goodbye. While the book begins with short poems in a single lyric voice, the poems become longer and increasingly fragmented as one reads on, increasingly inhabited by "other" voices. The longer poem "Cruising Bardies," while still concerned with the figure of the mother, takes us into a more abstract realm, incorporating quotes from critic Roland Barthes and interrogating the psychoanalytic ideas of Sigmund Freud and Melanie Klein. Following "Cruising Barthes' are five apparently anomalous poems that feature not an autobiographical speaker, but what appear to be fictive speakers from Japanese folktales and tales of the supernatural. Finally, the penultimate poem, "The Hemisphere: Kuchuk Hanem" typographically presents four interwoven voices: the quoted voices of postcolonial critic Edward Said and nineteenth-century writer Gustave Flaubert; the lyric voice of the autobiographical speaker; and the imagined voice of Kuchuk Hanem, an Egyptian courtesan whom Flaubert encountered and wrote about in his travels through Egypt.
Publication details
Published in:
Retallack Joan, Spahr Juliana (2006) Poetry & pedagogy: the challenge of the contemporary. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Seiten: 234-238
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-137-11449-5_16
Referenz:
Chang Juliana (2006) „"Other" voices: teaching Kimiko Hahn's The unbearable heart“, In: J. Retallack & J. Spahr (eds.), Poetry & pedagogy, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 234–238.