REPOZYTORIUM UNIWERSYTETU
W BIAŁYMSTOKU
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dc.contributor.authorKamionowski, Jerzy-
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-11T11:07:20Z-
dc.date.available2025-02-11T11:07:20Z-
dc.date.issued2024-
dc.identifier.citationCrossroads. A Journal of English Studies 46 (3/2024), pp. 73-91pl
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11320/17955-
dc.description.abstractThe article focuses on Wanda Coleman’s protracted series of American Sonnets as a prime example of what I call the poetics of transgression, which the poet worked out and implemented in her “jazz sonnets.” The article discusses the reasons behind Coleman’s decision to turn towards formal poetry, and argues that her choice of the sonnet form is a transgressive gesture, which means a challenge to the white tradition whose limits are infringed by violating the convention, as Coleman approaches the sonnet as the entirely plastic form in the meaning that Catherine Malabou gives to the term. Through the formal transgression – i.e., breaking the rules and destruction of all the recognizable features of the sonnet, the poet demonstrates her refusal to be its slave, as she actively challenges and reshapes the old form by “jazzing it up.” Simultaneously, the formal choice of the sonnet allows her to extend her earlier subject matter concerning black women’s experience in the Los Angeles ghetto. Merging “integrity” with “extension” (the features of black writing identified by Craig Werner) provides Coleman with a foundation to discuss larger topics from a black perspective, such as history, identity, culture, and poetry itself. As a result, her American Sonnets series remains the poet’s most consistent and subtle strategy of tracing down and exorcising the demon of racism wherever it hides – i.e. in its manifestations in the acts of violence as well as its stubborn presence in American (sub)consciousness.pl
dc.language.isoenpl
dc.publisherThe University of Białystokpl
dc.rightsCreative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International Licensepl
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/pl
dc.subjectblack poetrypl
dc.subjectWanda Colemanpl
dc.subjectsonnetpl
dc.subjectplasticitypl
dc.subjecttransgressionpl
dc.subjectracismpl
dc.title“[T]hese are my slave songs”: The Poetics of Transgression and Exorcising the Demon of Racism in Wanda Coleman’s Jazz Sonnetspl
dc.typeArticlepl
dc.rights.holderCreative Commons Attribution NonCommercial ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)pl
dc.identifier.doi10.15290/CR.2024.46.3.06-
dc.description.Emailj.kamionowski@uwb.edu.plpl
dc.description.BiographicalnoteJerzy Kamionowski is an Associate Professor at the University of Białystok, Poland. He is the author of New Wine in Old Bottles. The Virtuality of the Presented World in Angela Carter’s Fiction (1999), Głosy z “dzikiej strefy” (Voices from the “wild zone”) (2011) on poetry of three women writers of the Black Arts Movement: Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez, and Audre Lorde, and From the House of the Slave to the Home of the Brave. The Motif of Home in Poetry by Black Women since the late 1960s (2019). Presently, he takes interest in the poetry of the post-BAM generation, as well as the representations of the Middle Passage in African American literaturepl
dc.description.AffiliationUniversity of Białystok, Polandpl
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dc.identifier.eissn2300-6250-
dc.description.issue46 (3/2024)pl
dc.description.firstpage73pl
dc.description.lastpage91pl
dc.identifier.citation2Crossroads. A Journal of English Studiespl
dc.identifier.orcid0000-0002-3515-8751-
Występuje w kolekcji(ach):Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies, 2024, Issue 46

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