Today's poem is "Instructions for Identifying "Illegal" Immigrants"
from Museum of the Americas
J. Michael Martinez
is Visiting Assistant Professor of Poetry at St. Lawrence University, he lives in upstate NY.
Other poems by J. Michael Martinez in Verse Daily:
Books by J. Michael Martinez:
Other poems on the web by J. Michael Martinez:
J. Michael Martinez's Website.
J. Michael Martinez According to Wikipedia.
J. Michael Martinez on Twitter.
About Museum of the Americas:
"J. Michael Martinez's visionary lyricism lands like a dark amber lightning bolt on the ivory blade of the American poetic genome, sparking a poesis of radiant mutations that we always dreamed possible—but wondered if they could ever truly transpire. With echoes of Pound and Melville, Paz and Borges and more, he forges a sui generis poetics of mestizo becoming that ranges from anatomizing pre-Columbian deities to memories of his Mexican American grandmother's funeral, with all of the atrocities and wonders that have passed between. Museum of the Americas offers a borderless American Genesis story that begins in Tenochtitlan, rather than Plymouth Rock. It feels like a tale we've been waiting to be told."
"This is a fascinating, layered collection of poetry that blurs genre in some really interesting ways. Martinez offers, as the title suggests, a museum of the Americas, and especially engages with Mexican migration and its effect on the body. Given the goings on of the world, this poetry is especially timely. Every piece in this book offers something beautiful or haunting or illuminating; every thought, every word, every image is precisely rendered."
"J. Michael Martinez may call this stunning collection a museum, but once you enter, it'll feel more like a dip into a repository of fun house mirrors; our entwined histories here are pushed, pulled, elongated, and always reflected straight back, with laser sharpness, to the reader's gaze. It is a book perfectly crafted to meet the complicated days we are living through."
"J. Michael Martinez's poetics is at once direct, critically incisive, and aesthetically adventurous. This collection is brimming with the enigma of social agency as manifested through culture. Museum of the Americas stands as a beacon for how the impulse towards radical democratic vision and practices can be tracked by a bold reformatting of historicity that speaks to our current moment."
July 27, 2010: "Portrait of an Iris" "You are porcelain pretty one..."
Five poems
Nine poems
Two poems
John Phillip Santos
Roxane Gay
Cornelius Eady
Rodrigo Tuscano
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