Tuesday, 5 May 2020

Jericho Brown


Jericho Brown has won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for his latest collection, "The Tradition" on 4th May 2020.  The prize for poetry is given annually to a “distinguished volume of original verse by an American author.” In selecting Brown’s book for the honour, the Pulitzer board called it “a collection of masterful lyrics that combine delicacy with historical urgency in their loving evocation of bodies vulnerable to hostility and violence.”
In short and deceptively simple lines, Brown’s poems in “The Tradition” explore the growing existence of trauma as part of an American culture both accustomed to ignoring evil – and unable to make change without taking the risk to acknowledge the pain it causes.
He captures that sentiment, surrounded by vivid imagery, in one of the book’s poems, “The Crossing” he says:
“I’m more than a conqueror, bigger
Than bravery.
I don’t march.
I’m the one who leaps.”

Brown also invented a new poetic form called the “duplex” to challenge the existing rules of poetry while his words challenged the contradictory myths and culture of the nation.

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