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West

A Translation

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Punctuated by historical images and told through multiple voices, languages, literary forms and documents, West: A Translation explores what unites and divides America, drawing a powerful, necessary connection between the completion of the transcontinental railroad and the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882-1943).

In 2018, Utah Poet Laureate Paisley Rekdal was commissioned to write a poem commemorating the 150th anniversary of the transcontinental railroad. The result is West: A Translation—an unflinching hybrid collection of poems and essays that draws a powerful, necessary connection between the railroad's completion and the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882-1943). Carved into the walls of the Angel Island Immigration Station, where Chinese migrants to the United States were detained during the Chinese Exclusion Act, is a poem elegizing a detainee who committed suicide. As West translates this anonymous Chinese elegy character by character, what's left is a haunting narrative distilled through the history and lens of transcontinental railroad workers, and a sweeping exploration of the railroad's cultural impact on America. Punctuated by historical images and told through multiple voices, languages, literary forms and documents, West explores what unites and divides America, and how our ideas about American history creep forward, even as the nation itself constantly threatens to spiral back.

West is accompanied by a website (www.westtrain.org) which features video poems and encourages self-exploration of the transcontinental railroad's history through an interactive, non-linear structure. Pairing this urgent book and innovative website, Rekdal masterfully challenges how histories themselves get written and disseminated. The result is a tour de force of resistance and resilience.
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    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2023

      The author of nonfiction (Appropriate: A Provocation) as well as verse (Nightingale), former Utah poet laureate Rekdal was commissioned in 2018 to write a poem commemorating the 150th anniversary of completion of the U.S. transcontinental railroad. What results is a captivating, extensively researched book blending poetry and essays, told from the perspective of the railroad workers while focusing on the lives and treatment of Chinese migrants and the devastation to the environment during the building process. In particular, the collection links the railroad's completion to the Chinese Exclusion Act (1882-1943) while probing an anonymous elegy carved into the walls of the Angel Island Immigration Station that honored a detainee who died by suicide. The collection is accompanied by a thorough notes section at once lyrical, informative, and autobiographical as Rekdal, whose mother is Chinese American, explores her own family history. In the end, the railroad is emblematic of both possibility and oppression; expanding her work to explore the Great Migration, Rekdal comments, "What is freedom/but the power to choose/ where you won't die?/ What is a train/ but the self once yoked to terror loosed/ inside a force that glides/ on heat and steam?" VERDICT A remarkable collection offering history not typically told in textbooks; an accompanying website (westtrain.org) with video poems and historical images adds context.--Sarah Michaelis

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 22, 2023
      In her commanding latest, Rekdal (Nightingale) incorporates various languages, historical documents, photographs, and other primary source texts. It reevaluates American history, linking the completion of the transcontinental railroad to the establishment of the Chinese Exclusion Act, which remained in effect from 1882 to 1943. Inspired by a poem carved into the Angel Island Immigration Station near San Francisco by an anonymous Chinese detainee, Rekdal “translates” the text character by character into a series of poems that reveal the hypocrisies and contradictions still prevalent in what it means to be “American” today. The collection opens with a poem following Abraham Lincoln’s body on a funeral train in 1865 as it travels across seven states, asking: “Can you still believe in the promise of this union?” A later poem reimagines questions asked by immigration officials, reframing the humanity of Chinese immigrants: “What diseases of the heart/ do you carry? What country do you see/ when you think of your children?” Through these poems, readers are asked to wrestle with the complex, layered histories of race, creed, class, and gender that are all too often overlooked in monolithic presentations of America’s past and present. Elegiac and shot through with righteous anger, this essential collection demands a national reckoning.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2023
      The powerful latest poetry and essay collection by Utah poet laureate Rekdal tells the story of the transcontinental railroad through the voices of the workers who built it. Commemorating the railroad's one-hundredfiftieth anniversary, connecting the completion of the railroad to the commencement of the Chinese Exclusion Act and drawing direct inspiration from one of the many Chinese elegies carved on the walls of a former California detention center, this work gives a voice to many who have been lost to history. Using each character of the elegy as a foundation, each piece offers a unique and evocative perspective, portraying migrant workers, railroad tycoons, labor activists, and politicians, among many others. Direct connections through history to the present are drawn, as in the contrapuntal poem, "Sad," which interchangeably profiles Andrew Johnson and Donald Trump, two presidents exactly 150 years apart. The elegantly written essays give historical and cultural context to the ordeals of the people affected by the railroad as well as personal family experiences. Startling glimpses into the railroad's effects on the environment, populations, and history of America are presented through concise, poetic prose. There is an accompanying website with companion videos and audio to enhance an already immersive and stunning collection. A musthave for libraries.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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