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Cannibal
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
12 posts | 7 read | 15 to read
Colliding with andconfrontingThe Tempestand postcolonial identity, the poems in Safiya Sinclair s Cannibal explore Jamaican childhood and history, race relations in America, womanhood, otherness, and exile. She evokes a home no longer accessible and a body at times uninhabitable, often mirrored by a hybrid Eve/Caliban figure. Blooming with intense lyricism and fertile imagery, these full-blooded poems are elegant, mythic, and intricately woven. Here the female body is a dark landscape; the female body is cannibal. Sinclair shocks and delights her readers with her willingness to disorient and provoke, creating a multitextured collage of beautiful and explosive poems. "
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review
Lindy
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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Pickpick

While I found the cover (by Kenyan artist Wangechi Mutu) off-putting, it does match the confrontational & intellectual nature of these poems. I often felt a bit lost, yet loved many individual lines & imagery. The content explores multiple aspects of Jamaican womanhood, linking each section to quotes from Shakespeare‘s The Tempest. It‘s a #poetry collection that releases more meaning upon each reading.

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Lindy
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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But dig where the soil is wet and plant the proud seed of your shame-tree; don‘t let them say it never grew.

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Lindy
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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Roll the saltfish barrel down the hill, sending that battered thunder clanging at the seaside moon, jangled by her long earrings at our sea, ten times bluer than the bluest eye.

#poetry

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Lindy
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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Concurrent books reference Toni Morrison‘s The Bluest Eye:
“our sea, ten times bluer than the bluest eye” in Safiya Sinclair‘s poem Mermaid (tagged book);
and a Black woman undergoing scientific experiments learns how people react to her when her eyes are bright blue (ie “A drunk Korean woman did a double take and said loud enough for everyone to hear ‘Toni Morrison would be ashamed of you.‘”) in Lakewood by Megan Gidding.

30 likes1 stack add
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Bertha_Mason
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair

"Sunset. That blood-orange hymn / combusting the year, nautilus chamber // of youth's obscurities, your empty room / for psalms, lost rituals."
-"In Childhood, Certain Skies Refined My Seeing"

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Bertha_Mason
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair

"The word "cannibal," the English variant of the Spanish word *canibal*, comes from the word *caribal*, a reference to the native Carib people in the West Indies, who Columbus thought ate human flesh and from whom the word "Caribbean" originated. By virtue of being *Caribbean*, all "West Indian" people are already, in a purely linguistic sense, born savage."

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BooksForYears
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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#LitsyPoetry365 Day 320 - In Childhood, Certain Skies Refined My Seeing

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BooksForYears
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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#LitsyPoetry365 Day 319 - Pocomania

We‘re now moving from Joshua Bennett‘s poems of black men‘s experiences in the US to those from a young Jamaican woman. I had the great fortune to witness both of these supremely talented poets read recently, and it was amazing!

The title here refers to a folk religion practiced in the poet‘s homeland of Jamaica, involving veneration of ancestors and a revival-type worship.

review
kdwinchester
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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Pickpick

Amazing poetry for poetry month.

LectricSheep She was in my MFA program with me! 8y
Redwritinghood The cover is kind of creeping me out, though. 8y
ReadingEnvy I missed the vagina on the cover until I was turning it back in 😹 8y
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kdwinchester @Redwritinghood Heavens yes 😆 8y
kdwinchester @ReadingEnvy IKR?? Had no idea until I was taking this picture. 😳😆 8y
Redwritinghood @kdwinchester @ReadingEnvy I did not notice that until you mentioned it. Now I can't not see it! 8y
78 likes4 stack adds7 comments
review
ReadingEnvy
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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Pickpick

Well this cover gets more disturbing the more I look at it. But the poems are solid, about leaving home, not fitting in, the south, being black, and somehow Shakespeare is in there as well. The poet is from Jamaica originally and this book is on the Dylan Thomas Prize long list.

zsuzsanna_reads I'd be too scared to put that on my bedside table! 8y
52 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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Julsmarshall
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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Amazing, powerful reading by Safiya Sinclair! Can't wait to read this one!

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evelynnalfred
Cannibal | Safiya Sinclair
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I know I am one of them. The emptied: