Google Books previews are unavailable because you have chosen to turn off third party cookies for enhanced content. Visit our cookies page to review your cookie settings.
Leaves Borrowed From Human Flesh (Paperback)
Imprint: Etruscan Press
Pages: 96
ISBN: 9798988198574
Published: 11th March 2025
Pages: 96
ISBN: 9798988198574
Published: 11th March 2025
This book will be reprinted and your order will be released in due course.
You'll be £15.50 closer to your next £10.00 credit when you purchase Leaves Borrowed From Human Flesh. What's this?
+£4.99 UK Delivery or free UK delivery if order is over £40
(click here for international delivery rates)
Order within the next 7 hours, 52 minutes to get your order processed the next working day!
Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates
(click here for international delivery rates)
Order within the next 7 hours, 52 minutes to get your order processed the next working day!
Need a currency converter? Check XE.com for live rates
In Leaves Borrowed from Human Flesh, the solipsistic self gives way to a language which attempts to recover the female body’s experience of place, and of the human and non-human creatures which inhabit it. The ethical dilemmas of representation are framed by a consciousness which allows itself to be permeated by whatever lies outside it, impinging on its boundaries to make them fluid, plural, at times, evanescent.
Divided into four sections which highlight an unmistakable female consciousness engaging with vast natural landscapes in four different continents, the collection’s evolution is towards a subtle form of resistance where anthropocentric certainties are interrogated. What starts as left-margined free verse, often using ekphrasis to highlight gender violence and resistance, leans increasingly towards the playful and experimental, at times adopting metre and traditional forms in combination with found poetry and erasure so as to destabilise the boundaries between genres. By the end of the collection, the page is no longer a mechanism for order and structure, but instead, evolves into a canvas and visual field, challenging the social order through language itself.
In Abigail Ardelle Zammit’s third collection, suffering, mortality and environmental degradation are inseparable from the poet’s relentless search for meaning. Relationships, aloneness and connectedness must be probed as inexhaustible themes in the vast trajectory of existence. Each poem is a question, an exploration of what can be unearthed through linguistic play, as well as an attempt to decolonise the self from a language that is always on the verge of running dry.
Other titles in Etruscan Press...