Author(s)
Season

ASA Lora Romero First Book Prize honorable mention

Since the 1980s, poets in Canada and the U.S. have increasingly turned away from the use of English, bringing multiple languages into dialogue—and into conflict—in their work. This growing but under-studied body of writing differs from previous forms of multilingual poetry. While modernist poets offered multilingual displays of literary refinement, contemporary translingual poetries speak to and are informed by feminist, anti-racist, immigrant rights, and Indigenous sovereignty movements. Although some translingual poems have entered Chicanx, Latinx, Asian American, and Indigenous literary canons, translingual poetry has not yet been studied as a cohesive body of writing. 

The first book-length study on the subject, Translingual Poetics argues for an urgent rethinking of Canada and the U.S.’s multiculturalist myths. Dowling demonstrates that rising multilingualism in both countries is understood as new and as an effect of cultural shifts toward multiculturalism and globalization. This view conceals the continent’s original Indigenous multilingualism and the ongoing violence of its dismantling. It also naturalizes English as traditional, proper, and, ironically, native

Reading a range of poets whose work contests this “settler monolingualism”—Jordan Abel, Layli Long Soldier, Myung Mi Kim, Guillermo Gómez-Peña, M. NourbeSe Philip, Rachel Zolf, Cecilia Vicuña, and others—Dowling argues that translingual poetry documents the flexible forms of racialization innovated by North American settler colonialisms. Combining deft close readings of poetry with innovative analyses of media, film, and government documents, Dowling shows that translingual poetry’s avoidance of authentic, personal speech reveals the differential forms of personhood and non-personhood imposed upon the settler, the native, and the alien.

“This lively, enlightening, and politically engaged study challenges the English-language nativism that undergirds liberal multiculturalism. The book explores multilingual poetry beginning with women of color feminists’ poems written in the 1980s and ending with twenty-first-century experimental writing as they develop a multilingual poetics of (dis)location.”—Rafael Pérez-Torres, University of California, Los Angeles 
“A sharply written study of an under-examined issue in American literature, and one that deserves the careful attention that this study offers. The book is full of excellent readings that often lead into provocative engagements with the crucial social and political issues of our time.” —Joseph Jonghyun Jeon, University of California, Irvine 
“Sarah Dowling has made a vital intervention in American letters with Translingual Poetics. Dowling articulates the myriad ways the settler colonial state legitimates its continual violence. Simultaneously, she guides the reader toward horizons of trenchant poetic resistance, contestation, and subversion. This work opens a space for presence in the face of erasure, memory in place of forgetting, and voice that cuts through silence.”—José Orduña, author, The Weight of Shadows: A Memoir of Immigration and Displacement

2019 Lora Romero First Book Publication Prize Honorable Mention

ISBN-13
9781609386061
Retail price
$80.00

ISBN-13
9781609386078
Retail price
$80.00

Publication Details

Publication Date
12/03/2018
Pages
240 pages
Trim size
6 × 9 inches
Art
3 b&w images
Edition
1st