Today's Headline: "Reflection: Twenty Years of Debut Poets" "Doomsday Device" is a categorical reference, establishing my occupation as a writer, a poet, to the conveniently brutal introduction of English language as currency of power in Ghana, then Gold Coast. "Doomsday Device" is a simulation, allusion to connect the gruesome English invasion and bombardement of Kumase in 1874 to the deliberate language invasion and colonialism that had begun long before the hostilities. Sarpong Osei Asamoah on "Doomsday Device" |
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"Reflection: Twenty Years of Debut Poets" "This special coverage, which first appeared in our November/December 2005 issue, originated from the understanding that first poetry collections are as worthy of acknowledgement and praise as debut novels, and other such works of prose, that tend to make bigger splashes in the literary community due to greater media attention and heightened fanfare." viaPOETS & WRITERS |
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What Sparks Poetry: Rowan Ricardo Phillips on Drafts "Each stage of the poem’s evolution reshaped its engagement with inherited forms. The invocation, the sound patterns, even the omission of forbidden—each choice was informed by an ongoing dialogue with Milton’s legacy. Yet through this recursive process, the poem became its own. The recursive act of writing allowed me to rework Milton’s themes of creation and rebellion through a contemporary lens, tracing a poetic lineage that spans from the epic tradition to the fractured rhythms of modern music." |
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