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Faylita Hicks

    Faylita Hicks est une auteure renommée dont l'œuvre explore les thèmes complexes de l'identité et de la justice sociale. À travers sa poésie et ses essais, elle examine l'intersection des expériences queer et noires avec l'expression artistique. Ses écrits se caractérisent par une perspicacité aiguisée et une voix audacieuse qui résonne auprès des lecteurs en quête de récits authentiques et stimulants. Hicks est également activement impliquée dans la communauté littéraire, où elle exerce des fonctions de rédactrice et d'organisatrice, renforçant ainsi son engagement envers l'art et l'activisme.

    HoodWitch
    • HoodWitch

      • 112pages
      • 4 heures de lecture
      4,4(129)Évaluer

      This riveting debut from poet Faylita Hicks is a reclamation of power for black women and nonbinary people whose bodies have become the very weapons used against them. HoodWitch tells the story of a young person who discovers that they are “something that can & will survive / a whole century of hunt.” Through a series of poems based on childhood photographs, Hicks invokes the spirits of mothers and daughters, sex workers and widows, to conjure an alternative to their own early deaths and the deaths of those whom they have already lost. In this collection about resilience, Hicks speaks about giving her child up for adoption, mourning the death of her fiancé, and embracing the nonbinary femme body—persevering in the face of medical malpractice, domestic abuse, and police violence. The poems find people transformed, “remade out of smoke & iron” into cyborgs and wolves, machines and witches—beings capable of seeking justice in a world that refuses them the option. ​Exploring the intersections of Christianity, modern mysticism, and Afrofuturism in a sometimes urban, sometimes natural setting, Hicks finds a place where “everyone everywhere is hands in the air,” where “you know they gonna push & pull it together. / Just like they learned to.” It is a place of natural magick—where someone like Hicks can have more than one name: where they can be both dead and alive, both a mortal and a god.

      HoodWitch