In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Before the DMZ, and: Faint
Cindy Juyoung Ok (bio)
Before the DMZ
My moth- er sent a photo of the federal build- ing she was being naturalized in, writing, Boring Ilove you. That winter her father revealed he left behind a first wife, two kids, north before the war, the news unremarkable because For us, everybody had somebody they— So my mother hired an investigator; visited because, newly American, she could. She flew south after, and at her photos, he pointed atthe 67-year-old he had last known at seven.Said, She was smart. She was really smart.Within a year he lost his memory to stroke. He cried when they tied him so he could not pull his tubes out and my mother had only seen him cry when the special ran on public broadcast. Ten thou- sand families reunited while every- one watched. Doesn’t anyone k- now this person? Live calls, arti- Gen-facts, tears—she watched erally no him watch. one recalled where they had been separated. But a ripped hem, or rules of a childhood game, that big mole. A port of waiting. I al- ways wanted to hate binary but I grew up here where the cure to forgetting a stubborn chorus is doing simple arithmetic. Her trip north was strange, formal— delicate words, doubtful gestures. She noticed the brother had pso- riasis on his knuckles and hid her laughter in a corner, her scars proof of genes that had skipped the one brother she knew. The countries are linked by land—mostly, I know, by an area covered in stone. I ima- gine jade-colored water between them, a wide, boring o- cean on the thirty- eighth parallel. [End Page 55]
Faint
Vagueness tends to criminalizeand of few available alternativesmy favorite is the dream of the same
room. Pick your noise, in wellsor against walls. In the light
of the microwave clock, under adviceof long symbols, showily I become
my own guest (in mother words,a duty). Oxygen a calm oddityeverywhere but its status more
bounced in bias. To be my chorus,I first had to be a teenager who hoped
to kill the myth of the protagonist,related quarries. Mental trespasses then
of floating down from tall towersdenoted the promise of language’send. In its icon of bloodlessness,
my skin had, has, the potentialto be a good canvas for the palettes
of others. I’m not native to anyplace and so naive to every log—
still want the trees less naked. [End Page 56]
Cindy Juyoung Ok
Cindy Juyoung Ok is the author of Ward Toward (Yale University Press 2024) and teaches poetry at Kenyon College.
期刊介绍:
Having never missed an issue in 115 years, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the country. Begun in 1892 at the University of the South, it has stood as guardian and steward for the enduring voices of American, British, and Irish literature. Published quarterly, the Review is unique in the field of letters for its rich tradition of literary excellence in general nonfiction, poetry, and fiction, and for its dedication to unvarnished no-nonsense literary criticism. Each volume is a mix of short reviews, omnibus reviews, memoirs, essays in reminiscence and criticism, poetry, and fiction.