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Featured on Aug 16th, 2003
If there is one thing you can say about the experience of civilization
and being human, there is no shortage of trouble.
Sometimes it seems as if the collective recognition of history is only
a generalized distillation of banal and often inaccurate information about
what has gone on in different times and places for the purpose of boring
high school students or providing demagogues, politicians and pundits
with enough information to skew facts sufficiently so they may sway us
to applaud or vote for them. Afterwards, we the people are often left
scratching our heads, if indeed, we are lucky enough to still have one,
and ask ourselves what the hell just happened. Often this generalizing
influence leads us to smug conclusions and arbitrary bias that are more
revealing about our own self-protecting insecurities than they are accurate
about the cause and effect of history.
Thus, we concoct notions that Blacks and Native Americans are inferior,
the indigent bring poverty upon themselves, various Supreme Beings have
various Chosen People, arbitrary lines drawn on a map dictate the character
of those living within them, terrorists attacked World Trade Center Towers
because they hate freedom, and the United States holds the moral high
ground in the arena of world politics. On the strength of these poorly
constructed ideas we condemn ourselves to repeat the worst moments of
history. It is only through the ex
All of Alice Derry's work is an intensely personal look at individual
lives. From her initial manuscript, Stages of Twilight,
through chapbooks Getting Used to the Body and Not
as You Once Imagined, and a second book, Clearwater,
she chronicles the lives and truths of ordinary people, including her
own. But it is in her seminal third volume, Strangers to Their Courage,
that Derry unsparingly uses the crucible of poetry to dispel the myths
and generalizing of history surrounding postwar Germany.amination of the
lives of individuals may we divine the truth of a moment or an era.
In the words of reviewer Li-Young Lee: "This book asks us to surrender
our simplistic ideas about race and prejudice, memory and forgetfulness,
and to begin to uncover a new paradigm for 'human.'
Please welcome Alice Derry
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