Into the Continent

Now available from Oskana Poetry & Poetics at University of Regina Press

Emily McGiffin’s poems examine imperial violence and colonialism in South Africa and Canada.

Multifaceted and multi-voiced, Emily McGiffin’s poems explore the ongoing violence, destruction, and loss wrought by colonialism and capitalist extraction across time and geographic space, from Turtle Island to South Africa. McGiffin animates the spectres that haunt our private and public pasts. Her words remind us that we live in a world shaped by the events and people of the past, by suffering, and seizure, yet at times in the shadow of great acts of generosity. This world, largely built by iterations of violence, still concentrates wealth into the hands of a few, and McGiffin reminds us that power wants to hold its grip, to reproduce itself.

“Language that both disturbs and delights.” ~Literary Review of Canada

 

 

my body an ark
carrying successors like a chambered nautilus
 
what i was placed here to do
ferry the unborn
across the inhospitable land
make a bed amid the thornbush
make a tea table, forge the domestic
bliss of my country
raise them as heirs
draw our lineage in the sand

Reviews:

“Ground-shattering poems…McGiffin’s twofold vision in axe and bayoneted rifle slices the settling and unsettling entries and cadences to past and future continents, as she blades the thickets of land and language.” Michael Greenstein, Mirimachi Reader, 26 March 2024

“Language that both disturbs and delights.” Caroline Noël, Literary Review of Canada, March 2024 issue