Toggle Nav

Tel: +44 (0) 20 8829 3000

Email: customercare@turnaround-uk.com

Mutiny of Morning

A Black Appropriation of Heart of Darkness

ISBN-13: 9781990263354

Author(s): Nikesha Breeze

Subjects: JH

Publisher: Daraja Press

Publisher Imprint: Daraja Press

Publication Date: 26-01-2022

Format: Paperback / softback

Availability: In stock

£28.99
Mutiny of Morning

About the book

Nikesha Breeze has taken pages from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, taken his words, and forced them to leave his colonized mind. She has made the words her own in poetic form. She illuminates the invisible Black voices inside, a radical, surgical, and unapologetic Black appropriation, at the same time as a careful birthing and spiritual road map. The resulting poems are sizzling purifications, violent restorations of integrity, pain, wound, bewilderment, rage, and, sometimes, luminous generosity. his is a work of Reclamation. The author, Nikesha Breeze, has slowly, page by page, reclaimed the text of the book Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad. This racist turn-of-the-19th-century book was pivotal in the continued dehumanization of Black people and in particular of African people, as it painted an image of bestiality on the Congo people and the continent. It is laced with racist imagery and language. The author has reappropriated the book, page by page, making 'BlackOut' poetry for each page, isolating methodically the words to create new poems of power and black voice within the text -stealing the language and reappropriating the power. Within an interdisciplinary practice of painting, sculpture, installation, filmmaking, and performance art, Nikesha Breeze's work investigates the interrelational and resilience of the black and queer body in relationship to power, vulnerability, the sacred, and the ancestral. Her work is deeply ritual and process-based, often employing her entire physical body in the action of her work. Originally from Portland, Oregon Nikesha Breeze lives and works in the high desert of New Mexico, she is an American born African Diaspora descendant of the Mende People of Sierra Leone, and Assyrian American Immigrants from Iran.