In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful
A poetic re-visioning of narratives of violence against women and nature

In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful is a meditation on water, land, women, and violent environmental changes as they affect both the natural world and human migration. The poet reckons with the unsettling realities that women experience, questioning the cause and effect of events and asking why stories of oppression are so often simply accepted as the only stories. Alutiiq language is used throughout these poems that are in conversation with history, ancestors, and an uncertain future, in imagery that moves in waves, returning again and again to the ocean, and a deep visioning of the "current."

Excerpt from IN THE FIELD

They asked me if I was a citizen.

They wanted to know what I had seen/
I had heard/
this was only a test:

Look at the mark and tell them what you see.

[...]

1141064097
In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful
A poetic re-visioning of narratives of violence against women and nature

In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful is a meditation on water, land, women, and violent environmental changes as they affect both the natural world and human migration. The poet reckons with the unsettling realities that women experience, questioning the cause and effect of events and asking why stories of oppression are so often simply accepted as the only stories. Alutiiq language is used throughout these poems that are in conversation with history, ancestors, and an uncertain future, in imagery that moves in waves, returning again and again to the ocean, and a deep visioning of the "current."

Excerpt from IN THE FIELD

They asked me if I was a citizen.

They wanted to know what I had seen/
I had heard/
this was only a test:

Look at the mark and tell them what you see.

[...]

15.95 In Stock
In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful

In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful

by Abigail Chabitnoy
In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful

In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful

by Abigail Chabitnoy

Paperback

$15.95 
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Overview

A poetic re-visioning of narratives of violence against women and nature

In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful is a meditation on water, land, women, and violent environmental changes as they affect both the natural world and human migration. The poet reckons with the unsettling realities that women experience, questioning the cause and effect of events and asking why stories of oppression are so often simply accepted as the only stories. Alutiiq language is used throughout these poems that are in conversation with history, ancestors, and an uncertain future, in imagery that moves in waves, returning again and again to the ocean, and a deep visioning of the "current."

Excerpt from IN THE FIELD

They asked me if I was a citizen.

They wanted to know what I had seen/
I had heard/
this was only a test:

Look at the mark and tell them what you see.

[...]


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780819500137
Publisher: Wesleyan University Press
Publication date: 11/01/2022
Series: Wesleyan Poetry Series
Pages: 104
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

ABIGAIL CHABITNOY (Amherst, MA) is a Koniag descendent and a member of the Tangirnaq Native Village in Kodiak, Alaska. Her first book, How to Dress a Fish, won the Colorado Book Award in the Poetry category and was shortlisted for the Griffin International Poetry Prize. She is an assistant professor at UMass Amherst.

Table of Contents

Signs You Arc Standing at the End 3

In the Field 5

A Persistent Dream of Large Bodies 7

Anatomy of a Wave 9

All the Daughters 11

In the Current Where Drowning Is Beautiful 13

Supplemental Enrichment Curriculum 15

If Not Seed 17

If a Field 19

Light Triptych 23

Kingugturningaitua 26

Baptism by Fire 28

Camouflage, Defense, and Predation Being Among the Reasons 30

Holes in the Field 32

When You Say the Deer Swept Out to Sea Was 'Saved' 34

How About a Unicorn Horn? 36

If You're Going to Look Like a Wolf They Have to Love You More Than They Fear You 38

Swell 41

Quliyangua'uciikamken 45

Redirection With My Dead Relatives 47

She Is Making Rope 49

How It Goes 51

She Thought This Might Be How It Ends 57

The Word of the Week Is Wave 59

I Too Grow Tired of the Plot 63

A Four-Part Apology for My Continued Being 65

Uriitarsurciqua 68

The Usual Mix of Dismal News 70

It's Hard to Signal My Distress with Hands Around My Neck in Every Dream 71

The Media Would Like to Tell Me the Color of My Fish Tail on Another Day for Wearing Red 73

Palinode 75

When You Can't Throw All the Men into the Ocean and Start Over 79

Sea Change 81

Use That Which Is for Emptying 84

If a Liability of Your Own Making 86

Six Lines for Christine 89

Letter to the Daughter I Would Like to Have 90

Notes 93

Acknowledgments 97

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"This remarkable book undertakes a kind of geological exploration of the hidden-in-plain-sight strata making up the world around us and our lives within it: raspberries against graves against glaciers; disappeared women alongside disappearing rivers; mythic transformations next to anonymous martyrdoms. Connecting it all are stories—the questions they ask and answer, what they reveal or obscure—and water—as source of life and death, body of history and place where history's bodies are buried, manifestation of the cross-currents that swirl through and around us, bellwether of what's to come. Chabitnoy invites us into a dazzling, urgent mode of inquiry in which poems—keen and liminal, epic and intimate, fierce and tender—are the conscious element depositing us wide-awake on the shore of the precarious present we inherit and inhabit where, increasingly, 'the high ground isn't.'"—Lisa Olstein, author of Late Empire

"In the Current Where Drowning is Beautiful will sweep you up and subdue you. Chabitnoy powerfully and lyrically addresses the crisis of violence against Indigenous women, giving voice to those who have been silenced. This is a timeless and important work."—Rena Priest, Washington State Poet Laureate, 2021-2023

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