|
Showing 1 - 1 of
1 matches in All Departments
Intricately weaving Quranic verse, psychology, and the hip-hop
soundtrack of their childhood, Sanah's poems reach for divinity in the
body; an archive that refuses erasure.
These poems traverse unruly emotional and physical landscapes,
Whiteness, islamophobia, homophobia, intergenerational suffering, and
the politics of therapeutic processes. In these pages, belief and
unbelief, goodness and badness, the material and spiritual are
intertwined, reclaiming queer love and desire as holy.
How are we incarcerated by others' gazes? Who gets to be good in a
society built upon hierarchy? How might we embrace each other's
madnesses? Sanah Ahsan asks questions that travel to the heart of our
humanness, bending the lines between psychologist and client to show us
the sacred nature of our wounds. These poems kneel to the messiness of
being alive, building altars to complication and presence.
Refusing binaries of gender or religious doctrine, I cannot be good
until you say it finds what is to be revered in the grey spaces of
morality, advancing imagination and self-compassion as sites of
communion.
This debut collection is a call to prayer, fearlessly complicating what
is good, and what is god.
|
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.