Moon Mirrored Indivisible by Matuk, Farid

Ingram

Moon Mirrored Indivisible

Regular price $18.00
Added to Cart! View cart or continue shopping.
Multilayered lyric poems that resist systems of power and foster intimacy. A previously undocumented child of Syrian and Peruvian parents, an inheritor of lineages marked...
Multilayered lyric poems that resist systems of power and foster intimacy.

A previously undocumented child of Syrian and Peruvian parents, an inheritor of lineages marked by colonial and gendered violence, and a survivor of childhood sexual assault, Farid Matuk approaches the musical capacities of verse not as mere excitation or decoration, but as forms that reclaim pleasure and presence. Entering the sonic constellations of Moon Mirrored Indivisible, the reader finds relief from nesting layers of containment that systems of power impose on our bodies and imaginations. In this hall of historical mirrors, fictions of identity are refracted, reflected, and multiplied into a vast field of possibilities. Matuk's meditations on place and power offer experiments in self-understanding, moving through expansive conversations between a lyric "I" and others, including poets, the speaker's partner, ancestors, and the reader, and creating spaces for strange intimacy. Each of the book's four sections of poems builds on the other to ask how we might form a collective--a people--not founded in orthodoxies of originality but in the mutual work of mirroring one another.


Author: Farid Matuk
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Published: 03/12/2025
Pages: 96
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.41lbs
Size: 10.97h x 4.62w x 0.33d
ISBN: 9780226840000


Review Citation(s):
Publishers Weekly 12/16/2024

About the Author
Farid Matuk is the author of the poetry collections This Isa Nice Neighborhood, My Daughter La Chola, and The Real Horse. With visual artist Nancy Friedemann-S?nchez, Matuk created the book-arts project Redolent, recipient of the 2023 Anna Rabinowitz Award from the Poetry Society of America. Matuk's work has been supported by residencies from the Headlands Center for the Arts, a visiting Holloway Lectureship in the Practice of Poetry at the University of California, Berkeley, and a 2024 USA Fellowship from United States Artists.