Social Poesis introduces readers to the work of one of Canada's most exciting and challenging poets. Through selections from across Zolf's poetic oeuvre, this book foregrounds the philosophical, ethical, and political questions that inform Zolf's poetry. Selections range from early poems in which Zolf explores transhistorical trauma and queer subjectivity to more recent writings in which Zolf examines militarism, settler colonialism, and other forms of state-sanctioned violence. Zolf's poetry enacts what she calls a "social poesis"; she is attuned to questions of ethical responsibility and the role, and limitations, of poetry as a tool for ethical thinking, political engagement, accountability, and bearing witness. Heather Milne's introduction examines Zolf's compositional strategies and traces a movement in Zolf's writing from an autobiographical poetics in which Zolf as subject/speaker is locatable towards a poetics that moves beyond the self to address political and ethical relations among subjects of geopolitics and settler colonialism. In her afterword, Zolf also traces the trajectory of her poetry, focusing on her most recent work in which poems are composed almost entirely from archival sources, enacting a kind of collective assemblage of enunciation.
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