Motherlands

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A01=Weijia Pan
Age Group_Uncategorized
Age Group_Uncategorized
Author_Weijia Pan
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DC
China
Chinese poetry
classical music
COP=United States
COVID-19
Delivery_Pre-order
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_poetry
immigration
international poetry
juxtaposition
Language_English
Louise Glck
Mao
Maoism
Max Ritvo
Max Ritvo Poetry Prize
PA=Not yet available
pandemic
post-Maoist China
Price_€10 to €20
PS=Forthcoming
quarantine
softlaunch
transnational poetry

Product details

  • ISBN 9781639551132
  • Dimensions: 139 x 215mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Oct 2024
  • Publisher: Milkweed Editions
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Winner of the Levis Reading Prize

Chosen by Louise Glück for the Max Ritvo Poetry Prize, this engrossing debut interrogates history, identity, and the power of poetry to elucidate both.

Motherlands opens with a child drawn early to poetry. “In summer I write. Two lines at a time, two vying souls / running up the wall.” The collection follows this speaker-poet through a childhood in post-Maoist China and an eventual move to the United States, laying bare cultural and linguistic tensions in both historical and modern settings. He cites Chinese laborers toiling in American factories—an echo of the brutalities endured by those who constructed the Transatlantic Railroad—and speaks to anxieties around belonging, assimilation, and identity. “If I forget one character a day,” he writes. “I will have forgotten Chinese / by the end of 2042.”

In these attentive, imaginative poems, Weijia Pan questions the artist’s duty—his duty—as a chronicler of truth, especially through issues of displacement and global injustice. What can the poet do but observe? And yet, in unpacking ancestral traumas connected to Maoist China and modern-day bigotry exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic, he still finds himself turning to art as a way to understand both the self and the world at large. Through elegant juxtapositions, Pan crafts an emotional world that is at once regional and universal—Li Bai and Du Fu sit alongside Glenn Gould and Sviatoslav Richter, pepper used to bless new roads is repurposed in the mace used against protesters, two languages compete on a single tongue. Lyrical and visionary, this collection embodies poetry’s capacity to ground us, teach us, and change us.

Weijia Pan is the author of Motherlands, selected by Louise Glück for the 2023 Max Ritvo Poetry Prize. A poet and translator from Shanghai, China, his poems have appeared in AGNIBoulevardCopper NickelGeorgia ReviewNew Ohio ReviewNinth LetterPoetry Daily, and elsewhere. He is a third-year MFA at the University of Houston, where he is a winner of the Paul Verlaine Prize in Poetry.

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