For Lack of a Dictionary

Rosalind Morris

Pages: 80

Fordham University Press
Fordham University Press

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ISBN: 9781531509736
Published: 01 April 2025
$17.95
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ISBN: 9781531509743
Published: 01 April 2025
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Poetry that weaves personal narratives with deep political insights, masterfully exploring the intricate intersections of history, philosophy, and emotion

In this debut collection, renowned scholar Rosalind Morris spans the lyrical landscapes of personal experience and global political dilemmas. Organized into four distinct sections, each featuring seven poems that vary in style and content, For Lack of a Dictionary reflects the diverse facets of human complexity and the struggle to find a language capable of addressing them. Beginning with a mythopoetic exploration of the self and progressing through varied voices and forms—from the epistolary and the erotic to the elegiac—the collection navigates the absences and presences that shape our interpersonal connections. From Homer’s Iliad to Hobbes’s Leviathan, and from the intimate letters of the Rosenbergs to the television broadcasts of lunar landings, Morris revisits epic figures of classical literature with a contemporary voice, concluding with poignant reflections on personal loss and the seductive allure of magical thinking in times of grief.

In the tradition of Adrienne Rich and Muriel Rukeyser, Morris engages in a dialogue that challenges and enlightens, positioning For Lack of a Dictionary as a profound commentary on the intersections of personal and political realms.

Rosalind Morris’s sonorous For Lack of a Dictionary reads like the answer to prayers I don’t quite remember making. But I must have made them. Because, line by line, poem by poem that’s the feeling: thanks. From the beckoning in 'Memory gives up / what starlight won’t forget' to the bracing in 'human order: / everyone burns their witches,' my thanks to this poet for re-measuring the meeting of metabolic onrush in what’s lyrical with the restraint, deliberate, knowing and knowledge require.---Ed Pavlić, author of Outward: Adrienne Rich's Expanding Solitudes

Rosalind Morris, Professor of Anthropology at Columbia University, is a prolific writer and scholar. Her recent books include Unstable Ground: The Lives, Deaths, and Afterlives of Gold in South Africa and Accounts and Drawings from Underground, co-created with William Kentridge. Recognized with Rockefeller and Guggenheim fellowships, a Berlin Prize, and residencies at prestigious institutions, as well as film festival prizes, Morris’s academic and creative works traverse disciplinary boundaries with artfulness, courage, and precision. Visit www.rosalindcmorris.com for more.

Website

If I Am
If I Am Six | 3
If I Am Seven | 5
Ten in the Library | 7
Eleven: Grammar Lessons | 8
Befindlichkeit | 9
The New Girl | 11
Patty Hearst Pays a Visit | 13

Everyone Burns Their Witches
Fear and I Are Twins | 17
Huntsville, TX | 21
If in a Tomb | 27
Letter to the Front in a Time of AIDS | 34
Late Night News | 36
Here and There | 37
Blue | 39

Ways of Seeing
Dreaming Eden | 43
Eyeless in Summer | 45
K, Accountant | 48
Blackest Above the Abattoir| 51
Variorum on Emily Dickinson’s Bluebird | 53
The Astronaut in Isolation | 55
Ways of Seeing (a Memory of Italy) | 56

Something Gets Planted
The Moons of Fifty | 61
Transit of Mercury | 66
Reading Dante in St. John the Divine Cathedral | 67
Hudson River Rhapsody | 68
Latenight, Called by You | 70
Sappho’s Foot | 71
Something Gets Planted | 73

Notes and Acknowledgments | 77