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Thinking with Trees

Thinking with Trees

Current price: $14.99
Publication Date: August 26th, 2021
Publisher:
Carcanet Press Ltd.
ISBN:
9781800171138
Pages:
120

Description

Winner of the Poetry Category OCM Bocas Prize for Caribbean Literature 2022

An Irish Times Best Poetry Books of 2021

A White Review Book of the Year 2021

Jason Allen-Paisant grew up in a village in central Jamaica. 'Trees were all around,' he writes, 'we often went to the yam ground, my grandmother's cultivation plot. When I think of my childhood, I see myself entering a deep woodland with cedars and logwood all around. [...] The muscular guango trees were like beings among whom we lived.'

Now he lives in Leeds, near a forest where he goes walking. 'Here, trees represent an alternative space, a refuge from an ultra-consumerist culture...' And even as they help him recover his connections with nature, these poems are inevitably political.

As Malika Booker writes, 'Allen-Paisant's poetic ruminations deceptively radicalise Wordsworth's pastoral scenic daffodils. The collection racializes contemporary ecological poetics and its power lies in Allen-Paisant's subtle destabilization of the ordinary dog walker's right to space, territory, property and leisure by positioning the colonised Black male body's complicated and unsafe reality in these spaces.'

About the Author

Jason Allen-Paisant is from a village called Coffee Grove in Manchester, Jamaica. He is Lecturer in Caribbean Poetry & Decolonial Thought in the School of English at the University of Leeds, where he is also the Director of the Institute for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies. He serves on the editorial board of Callaloo: Journal of African Diaspora Arts and Letters. He holds a doctorate in Medieval and Modern Languages from the University of Oxford, and he speaks seven languages. He lives in Leeds.

Praise for Thinking with Trees

'Jason Allen-Paisant deftly inscribes his own signature on worlds inner and outer in these gorgeous poems. The future of Caribbean lyric poetry is in great hands.' —Lorna Goodison
 

'These observant poems lay their burdens down by the rivers of Babylon and try to sing the Lord's song in a strange land. What might it mean for the black body to experience nature, not as labour, but as leisure? What might it mean to simply walk through a park and observe the birds and the trees? These poems are beautiful and gentle, but the questions they raise are difficult and important.' —Kei Miller
 

'In these quietly subversive lyrics, expectations are undone, of ecologies, of people, of poems.' —Rachael Allen