
One of our generation’s most important literary voices, Esther G. Belin was raised in the Los Angeles area as part of the legacy following the federally run Indian relocation policy. Her parents completed the Special Navajo Five-Year Program that operated from 1946 to 1961 at Sherman Institute in Riverside, California. Drawing from this experience, her poetry, activism, and multimedia work speaks to larger issues of urban Indian identity, acceptance, adaptation, and cultural estrangement.<br> <br> In this long-anticipated collection, Belin daringly maps the poetics of womanhood, the body, institution, family, and love. Depicting the personal and the political, <i>Of Cartography</i> is an exploration of identity through language. With poems ranging from prose to typographic and linguistic illustrations, this distinctive collection pushes the boundaries of traditional poetic form.<br> <br> Marking territory and position according to the Diné cardinal points, <i>Of Cartography</i> demands much from the reader, gives meaning to abstraction, and demonstrates the challenges of identity politics.<br>
Page Count:
75
Publication Date:
2017-09-26
ISBN-10:
0816536023
ISBN-13:
9780816536023
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