
The Earth In Our Bones
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
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āIf you do not love your body, then who?ā
Marc Nair in The Earth in Our Bones ā his eleventh collection ā presents a series of poems and photographs that move from smaller sites of race and personal identity to societal fractures and wider notions of belonging and navigating urban and natural space.
Whether musing on water bottles as an offering in an ancient temple or a series of poems that create an afterlife from found objects, there is an awareness of loss, lament and longing, an acknowledgement of the lands within each of us.
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āThe Earth in Our Bones is one of the strongest collections to have emerged in recent years. Here is an intense engagement with serious issues of race and otherness; their impact on personal identity and the perplexing question of personal and cultural identity. This collection grips me in the way the authorās two art forms, poetry and photography, show us how casual scenes and throwaway objects such as beach debris may open us to a deeper connection with what we never thought of before.ā
āAnne Lee Tzu Pheng, poet -
Marc Nair PhD isĀ an educator, poet andĀ multidisciplinary artist. HeĀ exhibits photographs, text-basedĀ video art, performsĀ spoken word and collaborates with graphic artists,Ā photographers, dancers andĀ visual artists.Ā Text and image areĀ deeply interwoven in NairāsĀ practice. In it, the verbal andĀ the visual occupy spaces thatĀ imply, or offer, the presenceĀ of an iterative self. The netĀ result is dialogic, a back-and-forthĀ where the gaze travelsĀ between the two, instinctively searching for connections andĀ new ways of telling.Ā The Earth In Our Bones is Nairās eleventh collection.
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Description
- Description
- Praise
- About the Author
-
āIf you do not love your body, then who?ā
Marc Nair in The Earth in Our Bones ā his eleventh collection ā presents a series of poems and photographs that move from smaller sites of race and personal identity to societal fractures and wider notions of belonging and navigating urban and natural space.
Whether musing on water bottles as an offering in an ancient temple or a series of poems that create an afterlife from found objects, there is an awareness of loss, lament and longing, an acknowledgement of the lands within each of us.
-
āThe Earth in Our Bones is one of the strongest collections to have emerged in recent years. Here is an intense engagement with serious issues of race and otherness; their impact on personal identity and the perplexing question of personal and cultural identity. This collection grips me in the way the authorās two art forms, poetry and photography, show us how casual scenes and throwaway objects such as beach debris may open us to a deeper connection with what we never thought of before.ā
āAnne Lee Tzu Pheng, poet -
Marc Nair PhD isĀ an educator, poet andĀ multidisciplinary artist. HeĀ exhibits photographs, text-basedĀ video art, performsĀ spoken word and collaborates with graphic artists,Ā photographers, dancers andĀ visual artists.Ā Text and image areĀ deeply interwoven in NairāsĀ practice. In it, the verbal andĀ the visual occupy spaces thatĀ imply, or offer, the presenceĀ of an iterative self. The netĀ result is dialogic, a back-and-forthĀ where the gaze travelsĀ between the two, instinctively searching for connections andĀ new ways of telling.Ā The Earth In Our Bones is Nairās eleventh collection.












