Out of the Dust
Out of the Dust: New and Selected Poems
JANICE MIRIKITANI
Series: Intersections: Asian and Pacific American Transcultural Studies
Copyright Date: 2014
Published by: University of Hawai'i Press, UCLA Asian American Studies Center, Los Angeles
Pages: 144
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt13x1jr4
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Book Info
Out of the Dust
Book Description:

Out of the Dust is a collection of new poems by activist, leader, poet, and editor Janice Mirikitani. After being named San Francisco’s second Poet Laureate in 2000, this fifth book of poems from Mirikitani was written in response to the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. Drawing from her own background as a Sansei (third generation) Japanese American, Mirikitani reflects on the many ways we connect through the dust and our ability to rise and renew ourselves from this place. From the dust of the World Trade Center in New York to the retaliatory ashes of the dead in America’s war in Afghanistan, the poems in this volume seek to explicate the connections of our humanity to the reactionary profiling of people of Middle Eastern descent and different ethnicities, comparing these choices to the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II. Mirikitani’s poems cover topics about rape, incest, the continued struggle for justice and economic equality, and the poet’s experiences throughout her 50-year career at Glide Foundation and Church in San Francisco, where she has helped to create groundbreaking programs for the poor, women and children, and those who are healing from sexual assault, violence and abuse. Though constructed from a depth of experiences with struggle, these poems also erupt in celebration of marriage, daughters, and the discovery of self through diversity.

eISBN: 978-0-8248-4794-4
Subjects: Language & Literature
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-iv)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. v-viii)
  3. Introduction: Out of the Dust
    Introduction: Out of the Dust (pp. ix-x)

    The events of 9/11 occurred during my tenure as San Francisco’s second poet laureate. City gatherings and media requested my words and poetry in response to the devastation. I felt paralyzed and mute. I found myself obsessing about the smallest details of grocery lists and fretting over my cat and my daughter.

    My work as executive director and cofounder of the GLIDE Foundation caused me to worry about losses in funding and the economy’s downturn. Everything felt destabilized.

    The writing. I was blocked. Searching for words like sifting through the dust, I remind myself I don’t write for me alone....

  4. Out of the Dust
    • The Grass Is Defiant
      The Grass Is Defiant (pp. 3-4)
    • When Mothers Talk
      When Mothers Talk (pp. 5-7)
    • Home
      Home (pp. 8-10)
    • A Thousand Cranes
      A Thousand Cranes (pp. 11-12)
    • Ehren Watada
      Ehren Watada (pp. 13-14)
    • High Heels and False Teeth
      High Heels and False Teeth (pp. 15-17)
    • Being Here
      Being Here (pp. 18-18)
    • Some Women
      Some Women (pp. 19-19)
    • Imperfect Enough
      Imperfect Enough (pp. 20-21)
    • Letter to My Daughter
      Letter to My Daughter (pp. 22-23)
    • Her Fault
      Her Fault (pp. 24-26)
    • Breasts
      Breasts (pp. 27-28)
    • Thirsty
      Thirsty (pp. 29-30)
    • Driller
      Driller (pp. 31-32)
    • Junko
      Junko (pp. 33-34)
    • Kathy Change
      Kathy Change (pp. 35-36)
    • For the Price of a Rental Car
      For the Price of a Rental Car (pp. 37-38)
    • On Her Wedding Day
      On Her Wedding Day (pp. 39-40)
    • Untitled
      Untitled (pp. 41-41)
    • Dance with the Stranger
      Dance with the Stranger (pp. 42-44)
    • Dance
      Dance (pp. 45-47)
    • Step Fiercely
      Step Fiercely (pp. 48-49)
    • You Are in My Eyes
      You Are in My Eyes (pp. 50-52)
    • Haiku for the de Young
      Haiku for the de Young (pp. 53-55)
    • Winter Waka
      Winter Waka (pp. 56-56)
    • New Year Tanka
      New Year Tanka (pp. 56-56)
    • Al Robles
      Al Robles (pp. 57-59)
    • Last Place on Earth
      Last Place on Earth (pp. 60-61)
    • Desert Flowers II
      Desert Flowers II (pp. 62-64)
  5. We, the Dangerous
    • Looking for America
      • Paradise
        Paradise (pp. 69-69)
      • Looking for America
        Looking for America (pp. 70-70)
      • Beauty Contest
        Beauty Contest (pp. 71-75)
      • “I Can’t Forget the Face”
        “I Can’t Forget the Face” (pp. 76-76)
      • Yes, We Are Not Invisible
        Yes, We Are Not Invisible (pp. 77-77)
      • Looking for America: Found You
        Looking for America: Found You (pp. 78-78)
      • Progeny
        Progeny (pp. 79-80)
      • Lullabye
        Lullabye (pp. 81-82)
      • Why Is Preparing Fish a Political Act?
        Why Is Preparing Fish a Political Act? (pp. 83-84)
      • Red
        Red (pp. 85-86)
      • Graciella
        Graciella (pp. 87-88)
      • Jungle Rot and Open Arms
        Jungle Rot and Open Arms (pp. 89-91)
      • We, the Dangerous
        We, the Dangerous (pp. 92-93)
      • Desert Flowers I
        Desert Flowers I (pp. 94-96)
    • Breaking Silence
      • Insect Collection
        Insect Collection (pp. 99-100)
      • You Turned Your Head
        You Turned Your Head (pp. 101-102)
      • Bowl of Rage
        Bowl of Rage (pp. 103-104)
      • Where Bodies Are Buried
        Where Bodies Are Buried (pp. 105-116)
      • Without Tongue
        Without Tongue (pp. 117-117)
      • Breaking Silence
        Breaking Silence (pp. 118-121)
      • Prisons of Silence
        Prisons of Silence (pp. 122-126)
      • For My Father
        For My Father (pp. 127-128)
      • Hospitals Are to Die In
        Hospitals Are to Die In (pp. 129-130)
    • Woman with Straight Back
      • Woman with Straight Back
        Woman with Straight Back (pp. 133-136)
      • Cry
        Cry (pp. 137-139)
      • Orchid Daughter
        Orchid Daughter (pp. 140-141)
      • Without Comfort
        Without Comfort (pp. 142-143)
      • Generations of Women
        Generations of Women (pp. 144-150)
      • Ms.
        Ms. (pp. 151-152)
      • August 6
        August 6 (pp. 153-154)
      • Sing with Your Body
        Sing with Your Body (pp. 155-156)
    • Late with Lunch
      • Late with Lunch
        Late with Lunch (pp. 159-161)
      • Lydia
        Lydia (pp. 162-162)
      • Wrong Place, Wrong Time
        Wrong Place, Wrong Time (pp. 163-163)
      • Doreen
        Doreen (pp. 164-166)
      • Suicide Note
        Suicide Note (pp. 167-168)
      • It Isn’t Easy
        It Isn’t Easy (pp. 169-170)
    • Tongues Afire
      • War of the Body
        War of the Body (pp. 173-175)
      • What Matters
        What Matters (pp. 176-178)
      • Her Face
        Her Face (pp. 179-180)
      • Soul Food
        Soul Food (pp. 181-182)
      • Breaking Tradition
        Breaking Tradition (pp. 183-184)
      • Shadow in Stone
        Shadow in Stone (pp. 185-188)
      • Tongues Afire
        Tongues Afire (pp. 189-190)
  6. Glossary
    Glossary (pp. 191-194)
  7. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 195-199)
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