In The Name Of Our Families at Meripustak

In The Name Of Our Families

Books from same Author: Kwame Dawes And John Kinsella

Books from same Publisher: Peepal Tree Press Ltd

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  • General Information  
    Author(s)Kwame Dawes And John Kinsella
    PublisherPeepal Tree Press Ltd
    ISBN9781845234669
    BindingSoftcover
    LanguageEnglish
    Publish YearSeptember 2020

    Description

    Peepal Tree Press Ltd In The Name Of Our Families by Kwame Dawes And John Kinsella

    In their fourth round of dialogue, Kwame Dawes and John Kinsella set themselves the intertwined tasks of exploring the long poetic line and making raids upon what has always been implicit in their conversations, the meaning of family. The long-breathed line becomes metonym and metaphor for a subject that is slippery, devious, problematic, comforting and challenging. Poems acknowledge the life-giving support of the domestic, but also confess that though they may write 'in the name of our families our families will care less for we will always fail them'. Theres the difficult meaning of ancestry: for Kinsella the heroic myths of the settler past, the grandmother 'usurping/with her birth cry' the land that once belonged to the aboriginal Noonga people, and knowing that as the family tree spreads, physical trees 'fall so fast. Roots and all'. For Dawes theres the immediate puzzle of the literally contested ownership of his Jamaican ancestral space (and the meaning of all past family spaces), but beyond that ancestry leads through slavery to the broken heritage of Africa. It is also about what one inherits not only from history but from the genes, the knowledge that comes to Dawes in this year of writing, that he has inherited the condition that has brought blindness to other family members. And in their place in the chain, both men ask what will they bequeath as husbands, fathers and writers to the future? Not least theres the painful reminder of the familys mortality, the surprise of death that undermines all sense of security. And beyond our own, what do we owe those who are not family, who may need, as Kinsella writes, 'every bit of loving going out there'. Kinsella begins the dialogue by hoping the long line 'will take me somewhere beyond the restraints of my past' and certainly both poets discover a deeply rewarding reflectiveness in the conversational expansiveness of voice, and sometimes the long line lends itself to a magnificent prophetic flow that like a mighty river carries all before it. But before the end, Dawes confesses, 'John, I am winded from these long-breathed lines', and in a poem that goes to the very heart of the connections between voice, metre, lineation and meaning, reminds us both that this is a dialogue between writers of real differences of vision, but one that has brought deep mutual and self-understanding.