281 - Final Project - a.a.

Intro 2

sexual assault sucks
poets were like, damn let's talk about this shit

~feminist theory~poetry~

Rupi Kaur is one of these poets - relate to feminist activism and what not

talk about perceptions of her work, maybe some critiques, and relate it to today's culture

"thesis" - poetry is a means of talking about issues of rape culture

other poets: FreeQuency, poem called "I'm Sorry"
poem describes what daily life is like for women when we are always objectified and taught to be careful
for years, the legitimacy of victims' allegations have been questioned causing many many many cases to never act in their favor
"if a person is raped, look for the rapist - not the reason." 

Rupi Kaur is a contemporary poetWebsite: rupi kaur is a #1 new york times bestselling author and illustrator of two collections of poetry. she started drawing at the age of five when her mother handed her a paintbrush and said—draw your heart out. rupi views her life as an exploration of that artistic journey. after completing her degree in rhetoric studies she published her first collection of poems milk and honey in 2014. the internationally acclaimed collection sold well over a million copies gracing the new york times bestsellers list every week for over a year. it has since been translated into over thirty languages. her long-awaited second collection ‘the sun and her flowers’ was published in 2017. through this collection she continues to explore a variety of themes ranging from love. loss. trauma. healing. femininity. migration. ‘revolution.On Rupi’s website, a question she answers is “why did you start writing?”
Her response: “our trauma escapes the confines of our own times. we’re not just healing from what’s been inflicted onto us as children. my experiences have happened to my mother and her mother and her mother before that. it is generations of pain embedded into our souls.
i read hundreds of books growing up. but none can explain this torment to me. i need access to words written by people who look like me writing about the things i am going through. at that moment i realize the importance of representation and know this must be different for my children. they must have access to their own literature. i write to document we were here.”
 
“what prompted you to write about sexuality and abuse?”
Response: “by the time i am born i have already survived the first battle of my life. against female feticide. i am one of the lucky ones who has been allowed to live while millions of other girls are killed at or before birth. simply for being born girls.
our bodies are not our property. we are told we must be conservative. a good south asian girl is quiet. does as she is told. sex does not belong to her. it is something that happens to her on her wedding night. it is for him.
we know sexual violence intimately. we experience alarming rates of rape. from thousands of years of shame and oppression. from the community and from colonizer after colonizer.
but we also challenge that narrative every single day. and this poetry is just one route for doing that.”
Question of culture… Rupi’s south Asian heritage and how oppressed they are
https://rupikaur.com/faq/
 


 

This page has paths:

  1. Sexual Assault Discourse: The Role of Poetry in a Post-Structuralist World Alyssa A