Barbie Chang

Victoria Chang, 1970-

Book - 2017

"Barbie's cultural artifice is unmasked by Victoria Chang's imagination, lifting the struggle of Asian American experience to mythic levels"--

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Port Townsend, Washington : Copper Canyon Press [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Victoria Chang, 1970- (author)
Physical Description
x, 99 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781556595165
  • Once Barbie Chang Worked
  • I.
  • Barbie Chang Parks
  • Barbie Chang's Father Paid
  • Barbie Chang Runs
  • Once Barbie Chang Loved
  • Barbie Chang Shakes
  • Barbie Chang Can't Stop Watching
  • Mr. Darcy Leans
  • Is a Windcatcher
  • The Prognosis Is Poor
  • Barbie Chang Got Her Hair Done
  • Mr. Darcy Takes Barbie Chang
  • Barbie Chang Loves Evites
  • These Men Can Be Collected
  • Barbie Chang Has No Intention
  • Mr. Darcy Grabs
  • Barbie Chang's Father Calls
  • Barbie Chang Waits
  • II.
  • Dear P.
  • III.
  • The Doctor Says Hospice
  • Mr. Darcy Comes Again
  • Barbie Chang Vows to Quit
  • Barbie Chang's Tears
  • There Are Lungs
  • Mr. Darcy Grows
  • Barbie Chang's Daughter
  • Then Barbie Chang
  • Barbie Chang Keeps Watching
  • Barbie Chang Wants to Be Someone
  • In the End Elizabeth
  • Is It Rude for Barbie Chang
  • Barbie Chang's Mother Calls
  • Once a Man Said Everything
  • Barbie Chang Refuses
  • In and Out These Men Go
  • Some Days Barbie Chang
  • Barbie Chang Should Have Seen
  • Barbie Chang Is Done
  • Barbie Chang Pokes Through
  • How Alone Barbie Chang's Mother
  • IV.
  • Dear P. There will be a circle
  • Dear P. Let her let them
  • Dear P. Someone will love you
  • Dear P. If you are like me
  • Dear P. Please forage please do not
  • Dear P. One night the power
  • Dear P. Now that my heart
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this provocative and finely crafted volume, poet and children's author Chang (Is Mommy?) positions the Barbie doll-which she sees as a troubling and troubled representation of female passivity-as a lens through which women view their bodies, family histories, and relationships. Chang takes this conceit in unexpected directions, calling attention to the disconnect between the book's skillful formalist poetics, the poet's academic training, and commonplace representations of women in mass culture. "Aristotle says that// desire is a reaching out for the sweet," Chang writes, "maybe/ Barbie Chang reaches// her hand into the center to not/ possess but to be// possessed." The poems often take the form of couplets as well as sonnet sequences; they captivate when they embrace fragmentation rather than relying on internal rhyme and assonance as a source of narrative momentum. Elsewhere, Chang displays some heavy-handedness in such lines as "Mr. Darcy leans into Barbie Chang again/ weans her from his lean// then leans again his face doesn't reach/ her face but she can feel// its heat." The pronounced internal rhyme distracts from the more subtle stylistic gestures at play. Nevertheless, Chang is emerging as an exciting voice in contemporary poetry, and this is undoubtedly her most accomplished volume to date. (Nov.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Having investigated the strains of office life in The Boss, a PEN Center award winner, Chang turns to another arena in which power plays out uncomfortably. Barbie Chang may strive for the artificial perfection of her namesake, but the Circle of mothers at school shut her out ("a potomac// hurt why unearth her high school her/ children unearth// everything"). At stake isn't just odd otherness, of course, but race; one woman "would never/ again say hello to that// Chang even one named Barbie." Meanwhile, Barbie contends with ailing parents as Chang's unpunctuated rush of language amplifies the tension. VERDICT Perhaps not as sprightly as The Boss but still satisfying work from rising-star Chang, exploring the little explored. © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.