Oculus Poems

Sally Wen Mao

Book - 2019

"In Oculus, Sally Wen Mao explores exile not just as a matter of distance and displacement but as a migration through time and a reckoning with technology ... A fascinating sequence spanning the collection speaks in the voice of the international icon and first Chinese American movie star Anna May Wong, who travels through the history of cinema with a time machine, even past her death and into the future of film, where she finds she has no progeny. With a speculative imagination and a sharpened wit, Mao powerfully confronts the paradoxes of seeing and being seen, the intimacies made possible and ruined by the screen, and the many roles and representations that women of color are made to endure in order to survive a culture that seeks t...o consume them."--Amazon.com.

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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Minneapolis, Minnesota : Graywolf Press [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Sally Wen Mao (author)
Physical Description
119 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781555978259
  • Ghost story
  • Oculus
  • Occidentalism
  • Teledildonics
  • Mutant odalisque
  • Live feed
  • No resolution
  • Provenance: a vivisection
  • The toll of the sea
  • Anna May Wong on silent films
  • Anna May Wong fans her time machine
  • Anna May Wong goes home with Bruce Lee
  • Anna May Wong has breakfast at Tiffany's
  • Anna May Wong blows out sixteen candles
  • Antipode essay
  • Close encounters of the liminal kind
  • Electronic motherland
  • The Mongolian cow sour yogurt super voice girl
  • Electronic necropolis
  • Riding along for thousands of miles
  • The diary of Afong Moy
  • Anna May Wong meets Josephine Baker
  • Anna May Wong makes cameos
  • Anna May Wong rates the runway
  • Anna May Wong dreams of the Wong Kar-Wai
  • Anna May Wong goes viral
  • Ghost in the shell
  • Dirge with cutlery and furs
  • Yume Miru Kikai [The dreaming machine]
  • The five faces of Faye Valentine
  • Lavender town
  • The death of Ruan Lingyu
  • After Naim June Paik
  • Oculus.
Review by Library Journal Review

After debuting with the smart, blistering Mad Honey Symposium, Mao returns to investigate a technology-subjugated world in take-no-prisoners language. The first of several poems titled "Oculus" chillingly depict a young woman's upload of her suicide on social media ("She wiped her lens/ before she died. The smudge still lives"), and in another poem, "pixelated ghosts" are what's left to haunt us. Poem after poem conveys the creepy feeling of surveillance and indeed control; in the raw and impressive "Mutant Odalisque," the speaker says, "They watch and watch and watch the butcher/ cut, the surgeon mend,/ .They watch the way I open, flinch, bent// against the wind," then concludes, "Do they marvel at a conquest." Elsewhere, we are so "kinesthetically, and fucked" that we barely register the world, mediated as it is by the Internet. Of course, technology in some form has always been with us; a strong series of poems limns the film actress Annie May Wong, trapped first by cultural assumptions and then by celluloid ("the camera pans to your vulnerable self"). Though enduring contemporaneous distortion ("I wake up with a different face.// Who am I? Champion of drowning,/ champion of loss"), the speaker concludes "In my chest, what beat/ was cracked but still salvageable." VERDICT A strong second collection from a rising poet.-Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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