A book of poetry that retrieves the traces of exile.
As Juan Gelman once wrote, "exile has no form but leaves a trace." In EXILIUM, Argentine poet María Negroni sketches precisely such a trace, in a poetic form that approaches opposite extremes of material immediacy and evanescence. On an imaginative terrain that sweeps the Greco-Roman, the "long night" of Argentina's last dictatorship, and the crisis of displaced migrants today, Negroni locates exile within poetry itself. In this poetics of exile, the poem shines in its utopian desire to write the "unwritten words," revealing language at its most estranged, most wanting.
Poetry. Translation.