
Description
The prose poems in Jenny Irish's newest collection, Hatch, trace the consciousness of an artificial womb that must confront the role she has played in the continuation of the dying of the human species. This apocalyptic vision engages with the most pressing concerns of this contemporary sociopolitical moment: reproductive rights, climate crises, and mass extinction; gender and racial bias in healthcare and technology; disinformation, conspiracy theories, and pseudoscience; and the possibilities and dangers of artificial intelligence. More intimately, Hatch considers questions about how motherhood and its cultural expectations shape female identity. Working with avant strategies, Irish crafts a speculative feminist narrative, excavating and reexamining the aspects of the American experience that should have served as a call to action but have not. Part elegy and part prophecy, Hatch warns of a possible future while speaking to the present moment.
Product Details
Publisher | Curbstone Press |
Publish Date | March 15, 2024 |
Pages | 88 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780810146969 |
Dimensions | 8.9 X 5.8 X 0.4 inches | 0.3 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"To read Hatch is to consider bodily autonomy, the push and pull of progress and regression, cycles of learning and mislearning and relearning. Irish confronts sexism and racism in the medical field, ego in science, misclassification and bias in tech . . . Hatch is striking and surreal, a strange fable uncomfortably rooted in truth, in which we face our history, our present, our history-in-the-making." --Heavy Feather Review
"This inventive collection of prose poems by Jenny Irish has, in its metal womb, a central character whose fledgling consciousness reveals in subtle ways how easily we can misread humanity's impulses and intentions, its impact on the world, and its trajectory through failing ecosystems." --Full Stop
"An unsettling and fantastic collection." --Herizons Magazine
"Jenny Irish's vibrant use of language and imagery makes each page of Hatch sing. She can turn a sentence into a shiv, a paragraph into a punch. This collection is a deep, surprising, chilling -- yet, somehow, also really fun -- look at who we are as humans, at what we've done to the earth and each other, and at where the future may lead us (or, perhaps more accurately, how we as humans may impact the future of all life on the planet)." --Gayle Brandeis, author of Many Restless Concerns
"An entanglement of crosshatched vignettes that explore a violence unique to our species, Hatch provides a frightening premonition for a certain kind of gestating doom across generations--one that bears the symptoms of patriarchal inheritance, of racist inclinations in even our most "objective" technologies, and of our shared complicity in birthing cyclic atrocities. In this careful indictment, I read a startling awareness of the contours of our undoing--as Irish writes, "in the age of the metal womb, how quickly humans forget." How brutal you are, Jenny. How true the viciousness of your brilliant book." --Jessica Q. Stark, author of Buffalo Girl
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