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A poem sequence which
takes its title from the First Body of Laws (1641) of
the Massachusetts Bay Colony. It draws on such diverse texts as captivity
narratives, histories of the Indian Wars, personal letters, court
and town records,
and Remarkable Providences. The fractured form maintains the integrity
of the
sources and the reading process. It does not subsume the several voices
under
one "poetic" voice, but allows them the space and silence
through which to
approach us. It is an attempt to allow the Other to speak, and not
to presume
to speak for it.
The Body of Liberties is the first publication of the author.
"Gurnis reconnects us to New England's rich past by collage and
appropriating
language. Rather than a history lesson, we are give an valuable look
at our
current state. With remarkable clarity, [he] contracts imagined time
and expands
our matrix for understanding."
--Peter Gale Nelson, Entropic Paradigm
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