University of Wisconsin Press, 2000 Cloth: 978-0-299-17020-2 | Paper: 978-0-299-17024-0 Library of Congress Classification PS3552.U7263E36 2000 Dewey Decimal Classification 811.6
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
In 1994 the worst episode of genocide since the Holocaust of the Second World War ravaged the Central African country of Rwanda. Derick Burleson lived there and taught at the National University during the two years leading up to the genocide. The poems in this collection explore the cataclysm in a variety of forms and voices through the culture, myths, and customs he absorbed during this time. Ejo, meaning "yesterday and tomorrow" in Kinyarwandan, celebrates in language both lyrical and austere the lives of the friends Burleson made in Rwanda, those who survived to tell their own stories, and those whose voices were silenced.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Derick Burleson and his wife Anita Leverich lived in Rwanda from 1991 to 1993 where they taught English at the National University. A recipient of a 1999 National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, Burleson is currently completing a Ph.D. in Creative Writing at the University of Houston.
REVIEWS
"The place is Rwanda, the poet is a teacher of English from the American south, the poetry has the loveliness and wisdom of a casual, easy-breathing and humorous voice, able to encompass the clashes and the dovetailings of cultures. So you think at the start, and for a long while. The book then moves slowly from peace to the tides of civil war. Humane, frightening, horrifying, vivid, Burleson’s Ejo does what Conrad said all writing should do: it makes you see."—Alicia Ostriker
"Derick Burleson's wonderfully daring and unified collection of poems about Rwanda is so empathic, so bracing and forthright, so richly humane—at times comical, at times heartbreaking—that we come away from its testament radically deepened, shaken, enlivened, and changed."—Edward Hirsch
"Burleson is the poet in Rwanda the way Vallejo was the poet in Paris and Neruda the poet in Malaysia: in the running, up the country, on the scene. The lines are scrupulous, the movement scriptural in its inclusive justice. This is a very old and honorable poetry, a poetry of news, outraged and doleful, longing for acquittal."—Richard Howard
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Acknowledgments
Ejo
I.
Howdy
Good Customs
Taxi
Hardware Man
Bienvenue
Umuzungu Wambere (First White Man)
Nyavirezi
Hunger, Beard, and the Man
Ethnologist's Lament
The Thief
In This Country
II.
Beasts
Umugabo Mukaga
Abazungu
III.
Democracy
La Sympathique
Mango
Umwami in the Museum
Curfew
Glass Tower
At the Border
Home Again
Letter to Remera in Rwanda
Letter from Remera
One Million One
Waking Again
Remera Arrives
Remera's Story
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University of Wisconsin Press, 2000 Cloth: 978-0-299-17020-2 Paper: 978-0-299-17024-0
In 1994 the worst episode of genocide since the Holocaust of the Second World War ravaged the Central African country of Rwanda. Derick Burleson lived there and taught at the National University during the two years leading up to the genocide. The poems in this collection explore the cataclysm in a variety of forms and voices through the culture, myths, and customs he absorbed during this time. Ejo, meaning "yesterday and tomorrow" in Kinyarwandan, celebrates in language both lyrical and austere the lives of the friends Burleson made in Rwanda, those who survived to tell their own stories, and those whose voices were silenced.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Derick Burleson and his wife Anita Leverich lived in Rwanda from 1991 to 1993 where they taught English at the National University. A recipient of a 1999 National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, Burleson is currently completing a Ph.D. in Creative Writing at the University of Houston.
REVIEWS
"The place is Rwanda, the poet is a teacher of English from the American south, the poetry has the loveliness and wisdom of a casual, easy-breathing and humorous voice, able to encompass the clashes and the dovetailings of cultures. So you think at the start, and for a long while. The book then moves slowly from peace to the tides of civil war. Humane, frightening, horrifying, vivid, Burleson’s Ejo does what Conrad said all writing should do: it makes you see."—Alicia Ostriker
"Derick Burleson's wonderfully daring and unified collection of poems about Rwanda is so empathic, so bracing and forthright, so richly humane—at times comical, at times heartbreaking—that we come away from its testament radically deepened, shaken, enlivened, and changed."—Edward Hirsch
"Burleson is the poet in Rwanda the way Vallejo was the poet in Paris and Neruda the poet in Malaysia: in the running, up the country, on the scene. The lines are scrupulous, the movement scriptural in its inclusive justice. This is a very old and honorable poetry, a poetry of news, outraged and doleful, longing for acquittal."—Richard Howard
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Acknowledgments
Ejo
I.
Howdy
Good Customs
Taxi
Hardware Man
Bienvenue
Umuzungu Wambere (First White Man)
Nyavirezi
Hunger, Beard, and the Man
Ethnologist's Lament
The Thief
In This Country
II.
Beasts
Umugabo Mukaga
Abazungu
III.
Democracy
La Sympathique
Mango
Umwami in the Museum
Curfew
Glass Tower
At the Border
Home Again
Letter to Remera in Rwanda
Letter from Remera
One Million One
Waking Again
Remera Arrives
Remera's Story
REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
If you are a student who cannot use this book in printed form, BiblioVault may be able to supply you
with an electronic file for alternative access.
Please have the accessibility coordinator at your school fill out this form.
It can take 2-3 weeks for requests to be filled.
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE