ISBN: 9781911027232
Published: October 2017
Khairani Barokka’s first full poetry collection Rope is a spellbinding and impressive debut, kaleidoscopic in detail and richly compelling. With a meticulous artist’s instinct, these finely-tuned poems ask urgent questions about our impact upon the environment, and examine carefully the fragile ties that bind our lives and our fate to our planet, our ecosystems and to our fellow humans.
Sensual and ecologically attentive, Rope draws on issues of climate change, sexuality, violence, nature, desire and the body. Lush with detail, alert to its own distinct sounds, this is poetry in urgent and vivacious action - intent on finding vivid joy and hope amidst the destruction and dangers of the twenty-first century.
"With Rope, Khairani Barokka braids a helix from the "metronomic hum of human breath" and history's apparitions, daring to "strangle Myth / whole." These are poems to reach for in times of emergency, a nerve-bright lifeline for exploring how "Survival is an eternal thing." Polyphonic, and polychromatic, Barokka's work pulls us up from the brink "all-cells awake" to belt out to the void: "Thank you abysses, rock-bottoms,…morasses of salt — I am singing." What a blessing to have this lyrical, defiant book, this provocation and hymn."
- R.A. Villanueva, author of Reliquaria
"In a fertile genesis of tundra and twilight, with the life-giving tenderness of olive oil, spinach, and sambal, Khairani Barokka’s radiant full-length debut, Rope, weaves the guiding lights of womanhood with a weathering of desire “quietly washing our skin / into the drains of Kathmandu.” Here is a lush world of regeneration where “aubergines are nourished / from disintegrated bone,” where a sea-turtle “is a [s]alt-tongued priestess,” and where flood season changes “each ounce of rainfall” into a woman. Mingling syllables of Baso Minang, Javanese, and Indonesian with an Anglophone tongue, Barokka’s voice transforms her polyglot, transnational experiences – of rogue loves spanning a quartet of continents, of cathedrals and archipelagos unmoored from empires – into a global compass rose, celebrating journeys of ruin and restoration with renewed praise: “Ada sungai di pesisir. Sini kalian. Ikat tali diri ke samudra. / There’s a river on the shore. Come closer. Tie the rope of yourself to the sea." – Karen An-hwei Lee, author of Phyla of Joy and Ardor
"Rope is the debut of a unique lyric voice -- inventive and varied, rich in imagery, and always rooted in a searching intelligence. These beautifully written poems fizz with all the 'shimmer and jazz’ of modern life."
- Jane Yeh
Photo credit: Wasi Daniju
Khairani Barokka is a writer, poet, and artist in London. She is the writer/performer/producer of, among others, a deaf-accessible, solo spoken word/art show, “Eve and Mary Are Having Coffee”. It premiered at Edinburgh Fringe 2014 as Indonesia’s only representative, with a grant from HIVOS. She was recognized in 2014 by UNFPA as one of Indonesia’s “Inspirational Young Leaders Driving Social Change” for “raising awareness of disability through inclusive arts”, and has been awarded six residencies, with a seventh upcoming. Published internationally in anthologies and journals, Okka has also presented work extensively, in nine countries, is co-editor of Stairs and Whispers: D/deaf and Disabled Poets Write Back (Nine Arches Press, 2017), HEAT: A Southeast Asian Urban Anthology (Buku Fixi Publishing, 2016), and is a PhD-by-practice candidate at Goldsmiths, as an LPDP Scholar in Visual Cultures. Okka is author/illustrator of Indigenous Species (Tilted Axis Press). Rope is her first full-length poetry collection.
Daniel Sluman’s bleak brilliance in the terrible is a masterclass in the power of poetry to confront difficult subject matter with accuracy and painstaking openness. These are rigorous and exacting poems, that dare to go to some of the darkest places and speak with stark precision.
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