Lethal Theater
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
In her new poetry collection, Lethal Theater, Susannah Nevison reckons with the rituals of violence that underpin the American prison system, both domestically and abroad. Exploring the multiple roles of medicine in incarceration, Nevison’s poems expose the psychological and physical pain felt by the prison system’s inhabitants. Nevison asks readers to consider the act and complications of looking—at the spectacle of punishment, isolation, and interrogation, as mapped onto incarcerated bodies—by those who participate in and enforce dangerous prison practices, those who benefit from the exploitation of incarcerated bodies, and those who bear witness to suffering. Unfolding in three sections, Nevison’s poems fluidly move among themes of isolation and violence in prisons during period of war, the history of medical experimentation on domestic prisoners, and the intersection between anesthesia used in hospital settings and anesthesia used in cases of lethal injection. Lethal Theater is an attempt to articulate and make visible a grotesque and overlooked part of American pain.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The title of Nevison's second collection (after Teratology) is drawn from ethnographer Dwight Conquergood's article "Lethal Theatre: Performance, Punishment, and the Death Penalty." In these poems, Nevison leads us behind the scenes of a part-researched, part-imagined American prison system: "In the surgical theater, draw back the curtain so one can see the scene as it's been staged. Drape a sheet over the body before you begin." Nevison explores moments in history when prison inmates participated in dangerous medical experiments, such as the dermatological testing that occurred from the 1950s to the '70s in Philadelphia. While Nevison's first collection explored disability including her own through a zoomorphic lens, comparisons between prison inmates and animals do not prove as affecting in this collection: "The bars lash light across his pupils, eyes unshining, unlike those of better animals who stalk at night." Elsewhere, the incarcerated are described as "men deemed beyond/ repair work their daily recognitions:/ they toil and repeat their movements,/ until they replicate an old domestic rite,/ how wild dogs came down the mountains/ to sleep beside us, how over time/ we let them." At a time when writers and readers are questioning the appropriation of others' voices in poetry, this collection provides fertile ground for conversation.