Saturday, January 31, 2015

Review: Shalan Joudry’s Generations Re-Merging


Gaspereau Press 2014

Generations Re-Merging, Shalan Joudry’s debut book of poetry, takes readers on a “journey through a thick terrain” (9). Through the lens of nature Joudry explores complex issues facing the contemporary Mi’kmaw community. This book creates a model for understanding past injustices that have led to the current issues her cultures face.
        Although keyed to Joudry’s identity as a Mi’kmaw woman, this project evokes the work of other Atlantic Canadian poets like Tonja Gunvaldsen-Klaasen and Don McKay; the concept of "home" is central to all three. Don McKay notes in his essay Baler Twine, “Home, we may say, is the action of the inner life finding outer form; it is the settling of self into the world…To make a home is to establish identity with a primordial grasp.” Like McKay, “home” for Joudry is not as simple as four walls and roof. Rather, it is an identity formed through community and location, and when these are stripped away, so too is one’s sense of self.
            In the poem “Fabrics of the Land,” the places known so intimately by previous generations—who through that land re-newed themselves—have been turned into something unknowable:
                        community buildings
            a new gas bar for economy
            a school sized up for autonomy
            a house for someone who has waited
            their share of poverty (53)
The poems “Geology of Houses” and “Where Wild Things Grow” demonstrate that without the homes of their ancestors, the Mi’kmaw people survive in insufficient and unnatural housing. For example "Geology of Houses" discusses how a structure can cut people off from both land and  community:
                        …keep me apart
            from all things earthy lustred

            i’m holding out
            holding in the steady vision
            glacially patient
            to live in something raw and weathered
            at least something more alive than this (24)


            Joudry’s intermittent use of words from the Mi’kmaw language parallels the healing she trusts can be brought about by reconnecting with nature, ceremony and community—all of which will lead to reclaiming the identity and culture of the Mi’kmaw.
            Despite some minor lapses in clarity, Joudry’s book works wonderfully as a whole. In the prologue, she urges readers:
However we get lost along the way, let us
rejoice in the healing steps that follow.

I hope we all continue to gather at the edge
of the woods where the generations
before us and after us
re-merge. (9)

           Generations Re-Merging demonstrates that Joudry is a true wordsmith, painting vivid pictures of both the natural and unnatural world in her search
        to know that beauty does not live without horror 
        and to be certain that in the waking edge of rage
        we are still beautiful 
        wild and with a special grace. (27)


Joudry, Shalan. Generations Re-Merging. Kentville: Gaspereau Press, 2014.
McKay, Don. “Baler Twine: Thoughts on Ravens, Home and Nature Poetry.” Vis a Vis: Fieldnotes on Poetry and Wilderness. Wolfville: Gaspereau Press, 2001. 23-24.

--by Sharisse LeBrun, with input from Molly Strickland, Monica Grasse and Ben Lord.











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