Dance dance revolution Poems

Cathy Park Hong

Book - 2007

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Subjects
Published
New York : W.W. Norton & Co 2007.
Language
English
Main Author
Cathy Park Hong (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
120 p.
ISBN
9780393064841
  • Chronology of the Desert Guide
  • Foreword
  • I. Strolling Through the Hotel
  • Roles
  • St. Petersburg Hotel Series
  • 1. Services
  • 2. Preparation for Winter in the St. Petersburg Arboretum
  • 3. The Fountain Outside the Arboretum
  • 4. The Washrooms of St. Petersburg
  • 5. Atop the St. Petersburg Dome
  • Karaoke Lounge
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
  • II. Stirrings of Childhood That Begin with
  • Song that Breaks the World Record
  • The Lineage of Yes-Men
  • The Importance of Being English
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
  • III. Education During the Year of Falling Hair
  • Early Influence
  • Cholla Village of No
  • Windowless House
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
  • IV. Visions of Pamphlet Gods
  • Seizure
  • Tide Pool
  • Reunion
  • University Years
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
  • V. Intermission: Portrait of the Desert
  • Elegy
  • Almanac
  • Almanac
  • Almanac
  • Almanac
  • New Town
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
  • VI. Resuming the Desert Tour: Toward the Outskirts, Toward the Bridge
  • Basement of the St. Petersburg Hotel
  • Music of the Streets Series
  • 1. Hagglers in the Bazaar
  • 2. The Hula Hooper's Taunt
  • 3. The Auctioneer's Woo
  • 4. Dance Hall Song for When You're in the Mood
  • 5. Toasts in the Grove of Proposals
  • O Light, Red Light
  • Once the Factory, No Longer the Factory
  • The Guardsman's Warning
  • The Bridge
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
  • VII. Kwangju
  • Elegy
  • The Voice
  • Kwangju Replayed
  • Years in the Ginseng Colony
  • VIII. Dance Dance
  • Elegy
  • Orphic Day
  • The Refinery of Voices and Vices
  • Excerpt from the Historian's Memoir
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This deeply political Barnard Women Poets Prize-winning second book is part poetic sequence, part science fiction: in a future city called the Desert-a Vegas-like manmade tourist trap-a character called the Guide shows another, the Historian, the sights. The Guide has survived the historical Kwangju uprising, a 1980 massacre of students and other prodemocracy protesters by the American-backed South Korean dictatorship. The Guide's speeches-all in verse-turn repeatedly to her own life story, detailed in a superbly invented dialect, based on English but incorporating Spanish and Jamaican patois: "I'mma double migrant," the Guide says. "Ceded from Koryo [Korea], "ceded from/ Merikka." The "Dance Dance Revolution" the Guide has seen-described, vaguely, late (perhaps too late) in the book, and named for, but supposedly unrelated to, the popular video game-thus becomes "Kwangju Replayed," another failed attempt to destroy an undemocratic capitalist system. The Historian's own reflective autobiography, presented in a terse, melodic prose, brings in other examples of global horrors (Sierra Leonean amputees) as it mirrors a reader's own unease. Hong's earlier treatment of Korean-American themes in Translating Mo'um attracted some attention, but nothing could have predicted this admittedly flawed but highly original work: hard to excerpt, hard at times to decode, it's even harder to forget. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved