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Overview"""From a Conradian vantage point on the banks of the Thames to Lodz's Piotrkowska Ulicia, the longest street in Europe, Agnieszka Studzinska calibrates her seeing on history's ruins making their way into the private intimacies of home and the unhomely. The architecture of fragments - of bones, of the conversations with grandmothers, husbands, children, and the overheard violences of strangers - takes up Blanchot's call to unwork silence, to arrive at a new language. Stunningly deft and formally alive, these poems at every turn metamorphose a self to deliver, unforgettably, on that very promise of newness."" -Sandeep Parmar ""The measurements of existing from the inside, given through the concentrated, elegant details of the outside - this is a book of memory, of record, of heightened perception, in poetry. It's a remarkable, measured, generous collection, driven by an awareness and insight that reaches past the language of the outer world into a confrontation with something permanent and transitory. In this paradox is the brilliance."" -SJ Fowler ""Agnieszka Studzinska's Branches of a House is a poetic exploration of dwelling that becomes a hauntology of lost family, lost country, lost language. Its mitochondrial tracing of generations - grandparents, parents, children - evokes the traumatic shadow of the past: not just an emigre's return to the familiar Polish landscape of 'wetlands and fields' and silver birches; but also the sense of 'ghost houses in every village' - the product of war, holocaust, diaspora and the passage of time. The ghosts, shadows and absences are counter-balanced by an embodied poetics, tracking the body in time and through time - as child, woman, lover, wife, mother - with an attention to colours, tastes, smells, atmospheres, silences. The making and unmaking of home, in a poetry of continuing formal inventiveness and considerable emotional and linguistic delicacy, also involves a reaching out to other 'unfinished separations' and 'migratory configurations', historical and contemporary, in this impressively sustained sequence of poems."" -Robert Hampson" Full Product DetailsAuthor: Agnieszka StudzinskaPublisher: Shearsman Books Imprint: Shearsman Books Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.135kg ISBN: 9781848617773ISBN 10: 1848617771 Pages: 82 Publication Date: 01 October 2021 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationAgnieszka Studzinska has an MA in Creative Writing from the UEA. Her first debut collection, Snow Calling was shortlisted for the London New Poetry Award 2010. Her second collection, What Things Are was by published by Eyewear Publishing in 2014. Her third collection, Branches of a House is published by Shearsman Books in 2021. She has had poems published in The Long Poem Magazine, The Manhattan Review, Wildcourt, Agenda, Myslexia, as well as having poems featured in several other anthologies. Her poem Winged Narratives was nominated for the 2019 Forward Prize for best single poem. She is currently working towards her PhD at Royal Holloway, University of London, exploring how the image of the house is appropriated in contemporary American poetry. She teaches creative writing to adults, undergraduates and for The Poetry School. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |