MENU

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Poem-A-Day: Self-Portrait in a Wire Jacket by Monica Youn

with 0 comments
Self-Portrait in a Wire Jacket
 
 

To section off 
is to intensify, 

to deaden. 
Some surfaces

cannot be salvaged.
Leave them 

to lose function, 
to persist only

as armature,
holding in place

those radiant 
squares

of sensation--
the body a dichotomy

of flesh and 
blood. Wait here

in the trellised
garden you 

are becoming.
Soon you'll know 

that the strictures
have themselves 

become superfluous,
but at that point

you'll also know
that ungridded

you could no longer survive.

 

 

Copyright © 2013 by Monica Youn. Used with permission of the author.  

About This Poem
"The wire jacket was a Boxer Rebellion-era Chinese torture device that was used to administer the infamous 'death by a thousand cuts.' I encountered its description in Sax Rohmer's The Return of Dr. Fu Manchu, which I was reading as part of a project on Western representations of Asian culture. More abstractly, for me the wire jacket represented the consequences of living for too long under a system of constraint--how adaptation can involve an irrevocable, though self-imposed, loss of freedom.
 

--Monica Youn

Most Recent Book by Youn

(Four Way Books, 2010)
August 8, 2013

Monica Youn's second and most recent book of poems is Ignatz (Four Way Books, 2010), which was a finalist for the National Book Award. Youn lives in Manhattan, where she works as a lawyer.
Related Poems
by Christopher Kennedy
by Jen Tynes
by Chris Martin
Poem-A-Day
Launched during National Poetry Month in 2006, Poem-A-Day features new and previously unpublished poems by contemporary poets on weekdays and classic poems on weekends. Browse the 








 
Thanks for being a part of the Academy of American Poets community. To learn about other programs, including National Poetry Month, Poem in Your Pocket Day, the annual Poets Forum, and more, visit Poets.org.
 
This email was sent to prentice654.allsms@blogger.com by poetnews@poets.org |  
Academy of American Poets | 75 Maiden Lane | Suite 901 | New York | NY | 10038

0 comments:

Post a Comment