Zion Roses
English
By (author): Monica Minott
Monica Minotts poems grasp the readers attention with a voice that is distinctively personal, both taut and musical and tender and muscular when the occasion demands. Her language moves seamlessly and always appropriately between standard and Jamaican patwa, a reflection of a vision that encompasses a Black modernity still very much in touch with its aphoristic folk roots, where the ancestral meets Skype or a Jonkonnu band is stuck in a Kingston traffic jam. It is possible to see Minotts poems as being in a constant dialogue between four quadrants of engagement: with history, with landscape, with personal and family experience and with the worlds of literature, music and art. Minotts sense of history is deeply informed by a knowledge of the brutalities of commercial empire and of slavery and Black peoples struggles against injustice and for selfhood. There is scarcely a poem that does not have some precisely described sense of the materiality of its circumstance and the interactions between the physical world and human feelings. You sense that what sustains a certain bravery of self-exposure and of risk is a sense of belonging to family histories that have taught endurance, of knowing that loss can be gain (and this is certainly a world into which tragedy intrudes) and the experience of running from extremity to extremity, to glory. In literature and the arts, books are bright lamps to light away dark hours, and the examples of musicians like Don Drummond and Rico Rodriquez, artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and dancer Barry Moncrieffe point to the possibilities of the transcendent arising out of the everyday. Literature is a way of seeing that connects Telemachus,/ original rasta and broomseller of the Kingston streets to the Ulyssean world of voyaging and of seeking a home.
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