Read a poem, talk about it, read it again.

Episode 5: Excerpt from 'Life in a Box is a Pretty Life'

1/13/2017

Connor and Jack dig into an excerpt from Dawn Lundy Martin's work, Life in a Box is a Pretty Life. Their discussion delves into the questions the poem raises about race, gender, sexual orientation, and what it means to live in a body that patriarchal society has difficulty embracing.

Read the poem below or at this link. For more about Dawn Lundy Martin, follow this link.

from Life in a Box is a Pretty Life
By: Dawn Lundy Martin

Lake, interminable. I do not know where my house is. Where is my house? Summer steams by. Every border is cocked and ready. Flatten body against cool earth. Lie without sound. Be a cool corpse under wire teeth. The police are so young. They do not hear the wailing. Wailing, I’m told, is a figment of your imagination. What to know of the body’s refusal to open, of its hidden cave? Put the cave inside another cave so no one can reach it. Perspiration aches. Strain against dirt walls. I have come to you from a metal house. We had steel barriers to protect us from the sun. The lake drifts into forever. Windows here are small and I cannot see myself in them. What it is to be captured without spoons.

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