Review of Marguerite Poland's Taken Captive by Birds (original) (raw)

‘The grief of birds’: The ecopoetry of Anahera Maire Gildea (Sedition) and Michaela Keeble (Surrender)

Plumwood Mountain Journal, 2022

BUSHLAWYER, 2022. Laura Jean Mckay reviews Sedition and Surrender by Anahera Maire Gildea and Michaela Keeble. Sedition and Surrender are the work of publishing collective Taraheke | Bushlawyer, where Indigenous women and allies ‘protect story sovereignty from the appropriative juggernaut of the book industry’, using the banner ‘landback through literature’ (Taraheke). At once a joyous soar through language and style, both collections bare the weight of entanglement and estrangement with the more-than-human world, at once unique, while also in dialogue as poets in Aotearoa.

Memory in Limbo: The Reconstruction of Identity in Mating Birds (1986) by Lewis Nkosi

Imbizo, 2017

Lewis Nkosi’s novel, Mating birds (1986) offers a significant intervention in a history as dispersed and fragmented as South Africa’s, by focusing on those specific and critical episodes of South Africa’s past. This much-colonised country has had an extended history of perennial violence under colonialism and apartheid Some fiction by Black writers on this phenomenon may be seen to be reactive, what Njabulo Ndebele (South African writer) terms ‘Protest Literature’-and seeks to show black people as victims (Ndebele 1994). Nkosi’s novels, Mating birds (1986) in particular reverse this order through the narratives of different characters, illustrating that black people were not the passive victims of apartheid but played an active role towards its opposition and eradication. This is achieved through complex portrayal of the first-person narrative technique and interstices of memory and recall. This article explores how identity as a porous and fluid, and fragmented and fractured concep...

The Flight of Birds, by Joshua Lobb (Review)

Animal Studies Journal, 2019

Why, one could ask, does such a high proportion of the very best works of recently published literary and creative prose, which choose to engage with climate change, environmental shock, biodiversity crises, and extinction risks – the existential threats we face as a global multispecies population – all tell stories with and of nonhuman animals? My theory, one shared by Amitav Ghosh in The Great Derangement (although with differing conclusions) is that the very nature of the threats we face is a reckoning with our alienation from the nonhuman world. It is a reckoning we need to have, without ‘hiding’ away from our accountabilities. The argument here is that literature, poetry, and creative writings can help us have that reckoning by leading us to explore our storied relations with the nonhuman, especially animals. Ghosh, however, believes that the realist novel – and by implication the ‘highest’ forms of literature – has failed us in this need. This is because the novel has become a bourgeois vassal of numbing entertainments, and in such a form has wholly betrayed us, because it is not capable of coming to terms with the evidence of climate change: that, in simple terms, we are no longer connected to or a part of ‘nature’. That is, the realist bourgeois novel cannot admit we are, and always have been, ‘animals’ dependent on our very real environment.

A historical analysis of the Zimbabwe Bird and its colonial appropriation: A conciliatory treatise

Self, 2022

The Zimbabwe Bird: a manifest insignia that signifies national heritage and cultural identity has been misunderstood from the Eurocentric colonial perspective. However, the historic reason of the bird as conversed in this article divulges an extensive story of reputation among the local Zimbabweans. It has exposed the colonial socio-political and cultural discrimination happened in Zimbabwe. Since the Bird has been forcibly acquired and defamed by white colonists, this article recognizes the discrepancies in constructive and inclusive compensations by the colonial administration. The bird's chronicle has an undesirable upshot on two-pronged socio-political and socioeconomic relationships sandwiched between Zimbabwe and the British. Thus, this article pursues to converse the historicity and reputation of the bird to local peoples. It also discusses the consequences brought by unjustifiable colonial acquisition of the bird(s). The article therefore forwarded further suggestive recommendations on issues related to policies meant to facilitate strategic and sustainable peace building and reconciliation. At the end, it advocates for practical recompense of the Zimbabweans who are being represented by the bird illegally confiscated by the colonialists.

OPPRESSION, RESISTANCE AND LIBERATION: A FEMINIST STUDY OF JASMIN DARZNIK'S SONG OF A CAPTIVE BIRD

Dabeer, 2023

The research paper explores the power of literature as a tool of expression and resistance in the context of women's rights in Iran. The study focuses on The Song of a Captive Bird, a novel by Jasmin Darznik that portrays the struggles of Iranian women, mainly through the character of Forugh Farrokhzad, a feminist poet and icon. The research analyzes the novel's portrayal of various forms of oppression women face in Iran, including the enforcement of the hijab, restrictions on education and mobility, and limitations on women's autonomy. The study examines Forugh's poetry as a means of resistance, exploring its potential to challenge patriarchal norms and advocate for women's rights and freedom. It aims to recast the image of Iranian women being viewed as docile subjects without dissenting voices and argues that these women also assert their agency quite vociferously. Additionally, the research highlights the broader power of literature as a tool for social change, giving voice to marginalized communities and challenging dominant narratives. Ultimately, this paper emphasizes the critical importance of literature in giving voice to oppressed communities and advocating for social change, particularly in the context of women's rights in Iran.