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Ian Williams (3) (1979–)

Auteur van Reproduction

Voor andere auteurs genaamd Ian Williams, zie de verduidelijkingspagina.

6 Werken 219 Leden 11 Besprekingen

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Fotografie: John Jones

Werken van Ian Williams

Reproduction (2019) 155 exemplaren
Personals (2012) 16 exemplaren
Not Anyone's Anything (2011) 8 exemplaren
Word Problems (2020) 8 exemplaren
You Know Who You Are (2010) 5 exemplaren

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"Condition" is the best poem I've read in a long time.

Happy
to have
discovered
it in
here.
 
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biblioclair | Jun 20, 2023 |
Disorientation: Being Black in the World by Ian Williams is a collection of essays that should make every reader think and, more important, be at least a little uncomfortable.

Williams manages what many try (with varying degrees of success), which is to not only make the personal political but to make all of it important. While there is very little confrontational in the presentation that does not mean that he watered down his critiques to appease anyone. And for some of the more "sensitive" it will appear confrontational, but that will just be their defense mechanism kicking in when truth invades their space.

I think that most readers will take different things away from the book. Maybe not in the sense of a big picture view but in what will likely reverberate with them. One of my takeaways has to do with the interpersonal and the societal. I think many people who don't consider themselves overtly racist feel that how they treat people is the best thing they can do to make the world better. When in fact that should simply be normal, we should treat people the same regardless of any aspect of their personhood. Because of the society we live in, read a white supremacist one, what passes for normal behavior can often be racist (as well as sexist, etc), so doing the best one can interpersonally is important. But change has to be made in the structures and policies of society/government/business/etc. Without that, we aren't so much making change by being good human beings to fellow human beings as we are pretending that by doing so everything will get better. It won't. It hasn't. There have to be institutional changes. There have to be infrastructure changes. While many of the points in this book, other than his personal stories, are not new, Williams helps us to see where the hidden (to whites) anti-Black obstacles are. So while it is important on the personal level to make our interactions as antiracist as possible, we can't be satisfied with that. That should be the very beginning. And listening (or reading) to what others have to say about their experiences with an open mind and an open heart is a great place to start.

I don't care how many other books on anti-Black racism you've read, and I don't care how much you already "know" about the ills of our society, reading this book will offer more insight. Until we make the change necessary, we need to keep listening and keep striving. More perspectives can only help, even if you only take a couple of key points away.

Reviewed from a copy made available by the publisher via NetGalley.
… (meer)
 
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pomo58 | Nov 22, 2021 |
Structured in a 'clever' way, to be clever, not to add to the value of the story. Did not finish.
 
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oldblack | 7 andere besprekingen | Jan 25, 2021 |
I finally got around to reading this 2019 Giller Prize winner; actually, I listened to it as an audiobook, and that may not have been the best idea because of the experimental style.

In the late-1970s, nineteen-year-old Felicia Shaw, a black immigrant from a “small unrecognized island,” meets Edgar Gross, a much older and affluent white man of German background. Their first encounter is in a Toronto hospital room where their mothers are patients. Felicia’s mother dies and Edgar convinces Felicia to take care of his mother once she is discharged. Their short-lived relationship results in Felicia becoming pregnant. The novel then jumps fifteen years into the future. Felicia and her teenaged son Army rent part of a house from Oliver, a bitterly divorced man. In the latter part, Army is 36 but still living in the house shared by Oliver, Felicia, and Riot, a college-aged young man whom they have raised since his birth.

The novel examines relationships and unconventional family structures and how they are formed. Often relationships are established only because of proximity. That is certainly the case with Felicia and Edgar and Felicia and Oliver. When Felicia and Army move into part of a house owned by Oliver, they form a sort of family with him and his children. Later Oliver and Felicia adopt Riot, even though they are not a couple. Army tries to form a relationship with his father and even forces others to accept him as part of their already unorthodox family. On the other hand, some characters use distance to separate themselves from relationships. This is certainly the case with Riot’s mother and father.

The structure is unusual. Williams explained it in an article in Quill and Quire: “it’s in four parts and each part approaches reproduction differently. In part one it’s biological. It’s in 23 paired chapters so it’s chromosomal. Part two has four characters, so we go from those two characters to four characters and 16 chapters. And part three [grows] exponentially, from 16 to 256 small sections [16 x 16]. At the end of part three the book gets cancer and you see those tumours growing in the superscript and the subscript [rendered by the text flowing intermittently above, below, and along the sentence lines]. That is the final form of reproduction beyond human control” (https://quillandquire.com/authors/poet-ian-williams-experiments-with-structure-to-tell-a-classic-love-story/).

The style is also irregular. For instance, song lyrics, German words, and Caribbean patois are included. Some sections are like stream-of-consciousness. My issue with the style is that, especially in the later sections, it becomes more of a focus than the content. What’s with the many different spellings of Edgar’s names?

The characters are certainly distinct, but the men are all unlikeable. Edgar’s surname is so appropriate for a self-absorbed, arrogant manipulator who treats women abhorrently. Oliver is a wanna-be rock star who frequents strip clubs and constantly mocks his ex-wife’s appearance. Army is full of get-rich-quick schemes even as an adolescent; in his mid-30s, he remains a hustler, even in his romantic relationships. Riot is another man-child who expects others to support him while he makes art films which include recording a man’s death. And don’t get me started on Skinnyboy!

Women are forced to shoulder more responsibilities than men. Edgar has no qualms about leaving his mother without a caregiver, knowing that Felicia will feel a moral responsibility to step in. Felicia raises Army as a single mother without any financial support from the wealthy Edgar; in fact, he blames her for getting pregnant, even though he had lied to her about having a vasectomy. When Army brings a terminally-ill man into the home, his care falls mostly to Felicia. I kept wishing Felicia would develop a backbone and stand up to the men; if she had been more forceful with Army and Riot, they might have become more mature. I can understand a 19-year-old being manipulated, but it is more difficult to understand in a 55-year-old.

I’ve read two other titles that were on the 2019 Giller Prize shortlist: The Innocents by Michael Crummey (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2019/10/review-of-innocents-by-michael-crummey.html) and Small Game Hunting at the Local Coward Gun Club by Megan Gail Coles (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2020/03/review-of-small-game-hunting-at-local.html). I think both of these are of better quality. When compared to these two novels, Reproduction suffers because of more focus on style than substance.
… (meer)
 
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Schatje | 7 andere besprekingen | Oct 29, 2020 |

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Statistieken

Werken
6
Leden
219
Populariteit
#102,099
Waardering
½ 3.5
Besprekingen
11
ISBNs
79
Talen
3

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