Kalakuta Republic
eBook - ePub

Kalakuta Republic

Chris Abani

  1. 116 Seiten
  2. English
  3. ePUB (handyfreundlich)
  4. Über iOS und Android verfügbar
eBook - ePub

Kalakuta Republic

Chris Abani

Angaben zum Buch
Buchvorschau
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Quellenangaben

Über dieses Buch

This powerful collection of poems details the harrowing experiences endured by Abani and other political prisoners at the hands of Nigeria's military regime in the late 1980s. Abani vividly describes the characters that peopled this dark world, from prison inmates such as John James, tortured to death at the age of fourteen, to the general overseers. First published after his release from jail in 1991, Kalakuta Republic remains a paean to those who suffered and to the indomitable human spirit. 'Reading Abani's poems is like being singed by a red hot iron.' Harold Pinter 'Abani's poetry resonates with a devastating beauty which cuts to the heart of human strength, survival and tyranny.' Pride Magazine 'Stunning poems... Abani conveys the experience in words shaped into art and made unforgettable by their quietness.' New Humanist 'A beautiful work of art... elevates art and humanity above meanness and inhumanity.' World Literature Today 'A brave and challenging book... I was moved as much by what the poems have achieved as by what they have rescued from that nightmare world. Reading, I found myself in tears.' Sunday Tribune 'An unheralded chunk of authentic literature' New Statesman 'Abani's...poems contain moments of grace, humanity and humor.' Susannah Tarbush, Diwaniya 'Chris has emerged with poems that are graceful pieces of art, almost ready to be hung in a gallery for others to come and enter them and rest in them and weep in them and admire them.' Kwame Dawes, professor of English literature, University of Columbia, South Carolina, USA

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Information

Jahr
2015
ISBN
9780863568787

Roll Call

I remember rising one night
after midnight
and moving
through an impulse of loneliness
to try and find the stars.
Dennis Brutus
Letters to Martha

Job

1900
hours
cramped together: now
20 men in a cell built for 8.
Space is a closely fought ideal,
savagely defended prize.
Two men smoking:
‘If you die tonight can I have your shirt?’
‘Sure. If you do, I want your pencil.’
Job. Older than any of us
remembers
this prison run by British soldiers.
‘Let me die. Please let me die’, he cries.
No one replies. No one will console him.
Here death is courted. Welcomed.
Not in defeat. Or cowardice,
but as a statement
of our
Discontent
with this state of barbarism we
live
Under
the shade of a tree
executions are mercifully shielded
from the harsh sun.

Killing Time

1900
hours.
Killing time. 12. Anointed.
Blindfolded. Herded by seraphs
wings tinged rusty by innocent blood.
Stapled
to a pock-marked wall by fear
steel bolts, ratchet bullets.
Shots crack
like so many branches.
Of 12, 8 fall.
Shirt, pencil and all.
I know I am alive
because
terror drips down my legs.

Jeremiah

Jeremiah
was 6 feet, 9 inches the last
time we measured.
Face,
knotted against
sun-hard pain,
unravels.
Smiles, spread hemp
tendrils.
Often
fasting, he passes his food to
weaker, needier men.
He
stood between guards and a prone man,
helping him up
to
die on his feet, knees only slightly
buckled, eyes kissing the sun.

The Box

Wooden frame with skirt of sheet metal
6 foot by 3 foot by 3 foot.
Pin-pricks of air burn holes on the negative
of my body; choking on my own smell mingled
with scent of seared hair and skin,
I taste my pungent mortality.
One hour later:
Religion unfurls in desperate splendour.
Silently through old man’s mumbling lips
prayers tumble forth; spells to keep the
terror at bay; currency to buy salvation.
Matthew, Mark, Luke and John
bless this bed that I lie on.
Before I lay my head to sleep
I beg thee Lord, my soul to keep.
Two hours later:
Fear cramps me into panic; hysterical
I beat frantically, futilely at the sides.
2 inches is inadequate leeway; I only
brand dull thumps onto taut knuckles.
Three hours later:
Counting out time on beads of sweat
to keep from going insane. Mental
arithmetic. 2678 divide by the pie of 7.
Nursery rhymes work also – except when tears
muffle memory.
Four hours later:
Blank face, blank black eyes stare; icy
dense darkness; free falling, nothing below
except inky space sucking me into maw.
These are some of my nameless terrors.
Five hours later:
Water is thrown over the metal to cool me.
Through burning steam I see
a man in dazzling robes; face, a thousand suns
coming towards me; leading to light . . .
Six hours later:
‘. . . J...

Inhaltsverzeichnis

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Contents
  4. Author’s Note
  5. Introduction, by Kwame Dawes
  6. Portal
  7. Roll Call
  8. Still Dancing
  9. Postscripts – London
  10. Copyright
Zitierstile für Kalakuta Republic

APA 6 Citation

Abani, C. (2015). Kalakuta Republic ([edition unavailable]). Saqi. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/569466/kalakuta-republic-pdf (Original work published 2015)

Chicago Citation

Abani, Chris. (2015) 2015. Kalakuta Republic. [Edition unavailable]. Saqi. https://www.perlego.com/book/569466/kalakuta-republic-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Abani, C. (2015) Kalakuta Republic. [edition unavailable]. Saqi. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/569466/kalakuta-republic-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Abani, Chris. Kalakuta Republic. [edition unavailable]. Saqi, 2015. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.