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'The Bones/Say what/Cannot be give/Voice': Archival untelling in M. NourbeSe Philip's 'Zong!'

journal contribution
posted on 2023-04-05, 04:56 authored by Alyson MillerAlyson Miller
Rachel Kaufman argues the ‘archival poem brings to bear the rhythms of the past through the language of the present’ (2021: 21). Indeed, it is a unique genre for its ability to ‘hold in balance discordant images and thoughts’ (26) in its presentation of dissonant simultaneities—a quality critical to representing historical traumas, particularly those related to slavery and race. Through processes of disassembling and fracturing, archival poetry exposes the silences and redactions within ‘official’ histories by marking and blurring the borderlines of past and present, subject and object. Examining M. NourbeSe Philip’s Zong!, poetry grounded in the materiality of archival sources, this paper explores how the past might be defamiliarized to reveal that which is hidden or suppressed. In doing so, it contends that creative practice engaged with the archives offers the subversive potential to resist totalising historical accounts, whilst conveying the complex horrors of racial violence and oppression.

History

Journal

Axon: Creative Explorations

Volume

12

Pagination

1-10

Location

Canberra

ISSN

1838-8973

eISSN

1838-8973

Issue

2

Publisher

University of Canberra, Bruce