Deeper the tropics Poems

Matt Broaddus

Book - 2024

Via surreal persona poems, prose poems, and false translations, Deeper the Tropics navigates the mythology of the self via the masked figure. Inhabiting perspectives as various as that of an ancient Assyrian king and J. Robert Oppenheimer, these poems present the self as an accumulation of faces over which we have only partial control. In this semi-public/semi-private space of self, Deeper the Tropics celebrates the imaginative leaps we make to find ourselves in ever-changing configurations: a group of African mask poems enumerates the speaker's transforming understanding of ancestry, spirituality, and art; free-associative, false translations of chapters of the Tao Te Ching skirt singular notions of authenticity in favor of playful co...llaboration; and prose passages run through the collection, putting formal pressure on the generic constraints that constitute the (poetry) book form. Ultimately, the tropics, like the self, exist in a mythic space that is both local and global, fantasized of and politically contested. Similarly, these poems operate in a liminal space where possibilities propagate.

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Portland, OR : BUNNY, an imprint of Fonograf Editions [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Matt Broaddus (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"BUNNY06"--Title page verso/spine.
Physical Description
68 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9798987589090
  • Origin Story
  • Where I Live
  • Commute
  • Home
  • African Mask
  • Manifest Tao
  • Morning Meditation / Mediation #1
  • From the Journal of Doomed Prospector, Prospector Joe
  • Oppenheimer Visits Huntington Gardens, 1945
  • Evil Genius
  • Oracle Machine
  • It's Good to Be Ashurnasirpal II
  • In the King's Hunting Grounds
  • African Mask
  • Dusk Meditation / Meditation #2
  • Old Book
  • Cat Burglar Tao
  • Monkey King Gets Introspective for a Minute
  • Meanwhile in the Western Lands
  • Oppenheimer Goes to Work, Los Alamos, 1943
  • Dirtbags
  • Fuzzy Nozzle
  • Vacation Tao
  • Island Nihilism
  • African Mask
  • Oppenheimer Writes a Personal Note from Trinity, 1945
  • Night Meditation / Meditation #3
  • Junk Tao
  • Concerning Pears
  • Observation on the High Line
  • What to Do if You are Stuck in an Elevator
  • So I've decided to become a mentat
  • Geography Report
  • African Mask
  • Oppenheimer Creates Catalina Island, 1934
  • Noon Meditation / Meditation #4
  • Excuse me, I am lost
  • Otherwise Engaged
  • Bang Bang Tao
  • Paean to the Mycological World
  • Afternoon Meditation / Meditation #5
  • African Mask
  • Oppenheimer and the Pacific Ocean Have Their Weekly Chat, 1939
  • Aquifer Tao
  • To answer your question
  • Dawn Meditation / Meditation #6
  • What the Tao has to Say about Flamingos
  • Emotional Rescue
  • Notes
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Broaddus's enchanting, hallucinatory sophomore volume (after Temporal Anomalies) explores the fantasy of identity. One series of poems imagines the inner world of J. Robert Oppenheimer through a funhouse mirror, while another--titled "African Mask" after the work of photographer Phyllis Galembo--imagines a series of increasingly ominous false faces. While identity is seemingly a construct, Broaddus also demonstrates how difficult it is to shed when the state enforces penalties for doing so. He references Nigerian poet Christopher Okigbo, who died fighting for Biafran independence, in a poem about police violence that begins, "Another black man is/ dead. My country is authorized)." Elsewhere, Broaddus combines surreal and apocalyptic imagery with playful rhyme to charming effect: "Deepsea lobsters, suddenly beached,/ explode. Is there no place in creation for the haphazard/ crustacean?" A comically bizarre poem titled "What to Do If You Are Stuck in an Elevator" answers its own question and perfectly epitomizes the poet's tone in the first line: "You will need a goat." This skillful collection will resonate with those attuned to late-stage capitalism's many absurdities. (Oct.)

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