Conjunctions: 73 / Earth Elegies

Fall 2019

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Fallen Martyrs, Felled Trees
Rob Nixon

After Maria
Yxta Maya Murray

Disputed Site Sestinas
Kate Monaghan

Acequias as Quipus, Quipus as Poems
Arthur Sze

A Theory Pre-Post-Mortem
Joyce Carol Oates

An Interview
Diane Ackerman and Robert Macfarlane

The Entanglements: A Representation
Rachel Blau DuPlessis

The Great Trash Vortex: Dispatch from Fuerteventura, Islas Canarias
Matthew Gavin Frank

Two Stories
Brian Evenson

Five Poems
Translated by Helena Van Brande and Sabine Schiffner

Coyote
Wil Weitzel

Memorydrive
Kristine Ong Muslim

Valley of Glass
Karla Kelsey

Think of It
Quincy Troupe

Once Out of Nature
Troy Jollimore

In the Mist of Everything
Hilary Leichter

Third Étude Ending “Soon Come” Rebegun
Nathaniel Mackey

We Held Hands
Lance Olsen

Anthropocene/Burtynsky: Ekphrastics
Jessica Reed

The Magical Substratum
Heather Altfeld

Two Elemental Elegies
Andrew Mossin

Three Poems
Sandra Meek

Ancient Inland Sea
Krista Eastman

Mountains & The Wind
Eliot Weinberger

The Damage
Rae Armantrout

Wolf Tones
Sofia Samatar

Moby Dick, Ecoterrorist
James Morrow

Drop
Jonathan Thirkield

Spectra Reservoirs
Rebecca Lilly

Naming the Storm
Francine Prose

A Liberation
Matthew Cheney

Extracts
Jessica Campbell

Notes on a Metamorphosis
Thomas Dai

Amaryllis
Toby Olson

Excerpt from Sen’s Ninth and Final Notebook: S.+648 Days to S.+731 Days
Debbie Urbanski

Thistle
Donald Revell

Description

Conjunctions: 73, Earth Elegies

Edited by Bradford Morrow

Conjunctions:73, Earth Elegies is shipping now!

Even before the Brazilian rainforest became engulfed in flames, we knew that the evolving worldwide ecological crisis was one of existential magnitude. Vast territories of arctic glaciers melt, while huge swaths of earth’s permafrost continue to thaw, discharging methane, Pleistocene corpses, and microbes from millennia past. Hurricanes and typhoons are counterpointed by drought, against a backdrop of steadily escalating temperatures across the globe. Our oceans, choking on plastic and myriad chemicals, are rising up as if in protest. Populations of insects, birds, fish, mammals, flowers, trees, coral—living beings of every kind—are increasingly endangered as their habitats suffer, ushering them toward extinction. It is inarguable that our planet and all of its denizens, both flora and fauna, humans among them, are imperiled. Earth Elegies addresses this essential theme and celebrates our fragile, sublime, indispensable world.


Contributors included here range from poets and naturalists to fiction writers and essayists. Some are elegiac, others incensed. Some envision Anthropocene apocalypse, others offer historical and scientific perspectives. The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster is invoked, as are the Agbogbloshie e-waste dump in Ghana and the Great Pacific Garbage Patch’s toxic cousin in the Atlantic. Cases of deadly Naegleria fowleri are contracted by innocent swimmers in a Catskills lake. The Brazil nut foragers and eco-martyrs Maria do Espírito Santo da Silva and Zé Cláudio Ribeiro da Silva are remembered here, having been assassinated for their activism in the Amazonian state of Pará, where for years they had subsisted in harmony with their natural surroundings. Even a phantasmagoric Moby Dick resurfaces with Ahab in tow to engage in combat with multinational corporations shipping products across the ocean that are harmful to the ecology.

All of these writers have approached our theme from unexpectedly different angles, but no matter how diverse their narratives, the many voices and visions in this issue emanate from a single concern: the survival of our planet.