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Book Cover for: Wanting in Arabic, Trish Salah

Wanting in Arabic

Trish Salah

Winner:Lambda Literary Award -Transgender Fiction (2014)

Winner of the Lambda Literary Award, Transgender Fiction, 2014

Wanting in Arabic is a refusal of convenient silences, convenient stories. The author dwells on the contradictions of a transsexual poetics, in its attendant disfigurations of lyric, ghazal, l'ecriture feminine, and, in particular, her own sexed voice. Without a memory of her father's language, the questions her poems ask are those for a home known through photographs, for a language lost with childhood.

Braiding theoretical concerns with the ambivalences of sexed and raced identity, with profound romanticism, Wanting in Arabic attempts to traverse the fantasies of foundational loss and aggressive nostalgia in order to further a poetics of a conscious partiality of being, of generous struggle and comic rather than tragic misrecognition.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Tsar Publications
  • Publish Date: Nov 15th, 2013
  • Pages: 104
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - 0002
  • Dimensions: 8.70in - 5.70in - 0.30in - 0.40lb
  • EAN: 9781927494301
  • Categories: Middle EasternLGBTQ+

About the Author

Salah, Trish: - Trish Salah's recent writing appears in the journals Eleven Eleven, Feminist Studies, Journal of Medical Humanities, No More Potlucks, The Volta/Evening Will Come, West Coast Line and in the anthologies, Féminismes électriques, Sexing the Maple: A Canadian Sourcebook, and Troubling the Line: Trans and Genderqueer Poetry and Poetics. In support of her research on the emergence of Transgender Minor/ity Literatures, Salah has been awarded a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Insight Grant. She is co-editor of a special issue of TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly on cultural production, which is due out in 2014, as is her new book of poetry, Lyric Sexology, Vol. 1. She is assistant professor of Women's and Gender Studies at the University of Winnipeg.

Praise for this book

"The poems are routes one might take to reach home in your own body, mind, history, and landscape. They vibrate with longing and tenderness." --Kerry Clare, 49th Shelf

"Employing a number of different poetic modes, Salah's writing is by turns political, evocative, and quite often hot. A Lebanese-Canadian from Nova Scotia who never saw her father's homeland nor spoke his tongue, Salah explores the nuances of identity, and her writing is simply gorgeous." --The Walrus

"[Wanting in Arabic] shares a cultural experience rarely made available to mainstream American audiences." --Buzzfeed

"Wanting in Arabic is a self-impelled keening for identification with a lost tongue, both that of her father's Lebanese roots and her own metamorphosis ... cross-citing psychoanalytic and feminist wagers about the sexed text ... with glam-porno rubber-assed apostrophes to various lovers (not a poetics of celibacy, I assure you), with the funny and poignant savvy of postcolonial theory.... This indeterminate and determined voice chronicles the trans-self's journey as a tour et retour de force.... With ethical toughness and carnal ecstasy, Salah's writing bosoms up every damn dam in the literary waterway." --Margaret Christakos, The Globe and Mail

"This is a beautiful and disturbing collection of poems, writing from the uncharted langscape of the third sex. Images of the rose, of the beloved, can they be made new? Yes indeed, Wanting in Arabic does just that." --Mary Di Michele, author of Debriefing the Rose

"Trish Salah's poetic sequence is not simply a narrative of gender change; it's a wandering, thoughtful text, one both fierce and tremulous." --Erin Mouré, author of Furious and Domestic Fuel