[Later this month I start teaching a new online class, a variation of my Ethnic American Lit course that will focus on representations of work in American literature. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy a handful of such representations, leading up to a special weekend post on some of my favorite pop culture worker-characters!]
A quick but
stunning literary representation of work today, Martín Espada’s magisterial
poem “Who Burns for the Perfection of Paper” (1993).
I love
“Perfection” because it lays bare (literally as well as figuratively) the
hidden labor that constructs and sustains our society, especially at its
highest and most seemingly rarefied levels. I love it because it’s not a
political treatise about those realities but a visceral engagement with them,
through the lens of a single speaker’s journey, identity, and evolving
perspective on himself and his worlds. And I love it because I’ve heard Espada read it,
and can say (as proudly as possible) that I share the same public
university system with this immensely talented poet.
Last literary
work tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other representations of work you’d share?
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