The Enemy - Softcover

Campo, Rafael

 
9780822339601: The Enemy

Inhaltsangabe

In his fifth collection of poetry, the physician and award-winning writer Rafael Campo considers what it means to be the enemy in America today. Using the empathetic medium of a poetry grounded in the sentient physical body we all share, he writes of a country endlessly at war—not only against the presumed enemy abroad but also with its own troubled conscience. Yet whether he is addressing the U.S. invasion of Iraq, the battle against the AIDS pandemic, or the culture wars surrounding the issues of feminism and gay marriage, Campo’s compelling poems affirm the notion that hope arises from even the most bitter of conflicts. That hope—manifest here in the Cuban exile’s dream of returning to his homeland, in a dying IV drug user’s wish for humane medical treatment, in a downcast housewife’s desire to express herself meaningfully through art—is that somehow we can be better than ourselves. Through a kaleidoscopic lens of poetic forms, Campo soulfully reveals this greatest of human aspirations as the one sustaining us all.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Rafael Campo teaches and practices general internal medicine at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston. He is the author of several books of poetry, including Landscape with Human Figure, winner of the gold medal in poetry from ForeWord Magazine; Diva, a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Paterson Poetry Prize; and What the Body Told, winner of a Lambda Literary Award for Poetry; all also published by Duke University Press. He has written two books of essays, The Healing Art: A Doctor’s Black Bag of Poetry and The Poetry of Healing: A Doctor’s Education in Empathy, Identity, and Desire, winner of a Lambda Literary Award for memoir. His poetry and essays have appeared in periodicals including The New England Journal of Medicine, The New York Times Magazine, The Los Angeles Times, The Nation, The New Republic, Out, The Paris Review, and The Washington Post Book World.

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"Rafael Campo's "The Enemy" moves with naturalness, speed, and balance between experiences of domestic love--a couple of gay men, celebrating rites of daily ordinariness--and scenes from a doctor's life. We turn to Campo for frankness, freshness, and the tang of truth, and we are rewarded."--Rosanna Warren, author of "Departure"

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The Enemy

By RAFAEL CAMPO

Duke University Press

Copyright © 2007 Rafael Campo
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-0-8223-3960-1

Contents

I. The Enemy...........................................................................................3Dialogue with Sun and Poet.............................................................................4Addressed to Her (Provincetown, June 2002).............................................................5"Elsa, Varadero, 1934".................................................................................6Night Has Fallen.......................................................................................7Personal Mythology.....................................................................................8Piranhas...............................................................................................10Brief Treatise on the New Millennial Poetics...........................................................12El Viejo y la Mar......................................................................................13Ode to the Man Incidentally Caught in the Photograph of Us on My Desk..................................14The Enemy..............................................................................................15God, Gays, and Guns....................................................................................17Patriotic Poem.........................................................................................18Post-9/11 Parable......................................................................................19Sestina Dolorosa.......................................................................................21What Passes Now for Moral Discourse....................................................................22II. Eighteen Days in France............................................................................27III. Toward a Theory of Memory.........................................................................47from Cien Sonetos de Amor..............................................................................51A Simple Cuban Meal....................................................................................52The Sailfish...........................................................................................53Ganymede, to Zeus......................................................................................55After the Long Drive...................................................................................57For Jorge, after Twenty Years..........................................................................60Song in the Off-Season.................................................................................61Catastrophic Sestina...................................................................................63Toward a Theory of Memory..............................................................................67Patagonia..............................................................................................68Defense of Marriage....................................................................................69The Story of Us........................................................................................71The Sodomite's Lament..................................................................................72Equinoctial Downpour...................................................................................73Pantoum for Our Imagined Break-Up......................................................................74The Changing of the Seasons............................................................................75Once, It Seemed Better.................................................................................76IV. Dawn, New Age......................................................................................79Dawn, New Age..........................................................................................80Allegorical............................................................................................81Progress...............................................................................................82The Crocuses...........................................................................................83Crybaby Haiku..........................................................................................87"SILENCE = DEATH"......................................................................................88Clinical Vignettes.....................................................................................90You Bring Out the Doctor in Me.........................................................................92Composite of Three Poems from the Same Anthology by Williams, Rukeyser, and Sexton.....................93Tuesday Morning........................................................................................95Arriving...............................................................................................97Absolution.............................................................................................98On Doctoring...........................................................................................99

Chapter One

Dialogue with Sun and Poet in memory of June Jordan The sun is making arguments again. Today, its dappled chattering through leaves persuades me that the world deserves reprieve. You're dead, and though your subjects were contained in poetry that sometimes flustered me- I wanted to restore some order in your fridge, to witness Palestinian outrage somehow more dispassionately- I see now it was you who rewrote me. The sun refuses any compromise, insisting on the beauty of its rays, like you, illuminating how we're free yet not. Democracies of bugs and sand, fat kingdoms of the SUV, we're all beneath what both of you, great fireballs of life, have helped me better comprehend as truth. It's June, too bright to be the end of days that some foretell; the sun has more to teach, and soldiers still have distant wars they might imagine never starting. Instrument of peace, I take this pen into my hand to write, the morning almost over now. Flood the page with light, burn the house down, is what you say. Arise. I understand. Addressed to Her (Provincetown, June 2002) On seeing you that second time last night, Pat Benatar a disembodied blare amidst a night yet ravenous for dares, I thought I'd talk to you, to ask you why you let him grab your bangled arm that way. Presumptuous, I thought myself, to want to enter in your narrative of hurt. A sparkly rhinestone necklace named you "Kaye"; your tan was richly oiled, as if burnished more by hand than sun. A teenager flashed by, his skateboard growling come-ons as he eyed your heaving breasts. I wondered, too, how your caress might feel, if not to me, then to another. Around you glowed the plinkering arcade, like summer carnivals where I played straight. "Stop it-hey, you're hurting me." I smothered her, desperate to remake myself, her body so soft I prayed it might accept me, hold impressions long enough to be retold as truth. Kaye, I wanted to so badly I made myself forget what you must know: You turn to him, so awkwardly bent back, too beautiful to resist, the night gone black, and offer your unyielding, human soul stretched taut-forgiving him, forgiving us. "Elsa, Varadero,...

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9780822338628: The Enemy

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ISBN 10:  0822338629 ISBN 13:  9780822338628
Verlag: Duke University Press, 2007
Hardcover