Asia & Haiti

By Will Alexander

$20.00

Details
Publisher
Litmus Press
Original Language(s)
English
Additional Credits
Cover art by Byron Baker
Design by Mark Addison Smith
Genre(s)
Poetry
Edition, Year
Second Edition, 2024
ISBN
978-1-933959-88-7
Pages
152
Format
paperback
Availability
In Print

In Asia & Haiti, Will Alexander’s poetry functions as syncretic engine—combusting indigenous history, esoterica, and spiritual practice, with postcolonial criticism, political theory, and modern science—to generate a densely woven re-visioning of history. This 30th-anniversary second edition re-presents a classic book with new artwork by Alexander’s longtime collaborator, Byron Baker. It also includes a new preface by the author contextualizing the work within the present-day Tibetan liberation struggle and considerations of Haiti as a powerful symbol of resistance vis-à-vis “our contemporary political un-settlement.” “Asia & Haiti,” he writes, “takes up the tenor of continuing solar presence… far beyond calculable political fatigue, being alive as grammar via a living future.”

Will Alexander
Born in 1948, Will Alexander is a poet, novelist, essayist, playwright, visual artist and pianist. He was the recipient of a Whiting Fellowship for Poetry in 2001 and a California Arts Council Fellowship in 2002. He was also ... Read More

Published together as a book titled Asia & Haiti, the two poems “Asia” and “Haiti” exist in a kind of dialogic or interactive relationship to each other, so that together they imply a more comprehensive statement about…the current situation of oppressed peoples globally… In Asia & Haiti, the overlap of geopolitical and spiritual worlds, along with the scatological, pornographic, and surrealistic imagery, creates a critical dissonance in these vitriolic poems.

Harryette Mullen, “A Collective Force of Burning Ink”, Callaloo (Vol. 22, No. 2 (Spring, 1999).

 

Praise for Asia & Haiti

Asia & Haiti presents two long poems by Los Angeles poet Will Alexander, which, in the broadest sense, are about the cultures, economics, politics, history, and social concerns of the title regions. But Alexander’s poetry, densely imagistic and fiercely intelligent, takes these concerns into arpeggios of linguistic realms. Alexander’s poetry presents a remarkable re-writing of a history. Caught up in the vortex of a surrealistic vision and tornadoes of language, his words call up an American equivalent of Aimé Césaire.

— Douglas Messerli

Publisher of the First Edition (Sun & Moon Books 1995)

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