They also offer various lenses through which to analyze her haiku, providing unique insight into the language and themes of her work. They do a solid job looking at how Sanchez connects with current haiku theory and how she departs from it to create her own unique voice within the form of haiku. If she refuses to follow tradition, if her poems lack the core elements that make up a haiku, is it even appropriate to label these poems as haiku or to study them as haiku? Are these merely three line poems or stanzas, and would it be better to analyze the poems from that lens instead? The authors of these chapters seem to all agree that these are haiku, and contain enough comparison to Western haiku that they should be studied through that lens. This really captures the essence of the issue that many readers of Western haiku will take with Sanchez’s haiku. this book serves a number of worthwhile purposes: to introduce Sanchez to a wider audience (although she has won some pretty big prizes, including an American Book Award), to widen the discussion regarding haiku and its possibilities, and to remind us of the importance and beauty of the Black Arts Movement. Professor John Zheng (Mississippi Valley State University) has assembled a powerful and convincing store of essays which should cement Sanchez’s place among contemporary American letters. William Ferris, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, author of Give My Poor Heart Ease: Voices of the Mississippi Blues
John Zheng’s pioneering work on haiku in Richard Wright in his earlier book The Other World of Richard Wright: Perspectives on His Haiku and this fine work on Sonia Sanchez offers the reader a fascinating new perspective on both writers. Zheng notes that Sanchez, like Richard Wright, embraced haiku as a comfortable, familiar poetic structure. The volume’s editor John Zheng explains that Sanchez expressed herself as “a protest poet, a fighter, and a revolutionary” through haiku, a poetic form that originated as Japanese court poetry. Sonia Sanchez's Poetic Spirit Through Haiku explores how Sonia Sanchez used haiku to empower her voice within the Black Arts Movement. Joyce's Ijala: Sonia Sanchez and the African Poetic Tradition (1996) and Conversations with Sonia Sanchez (2007), which Joyce edited. Readers interested in Sanchez should also read Joyce A. Though Sanchez is primarily known as an activist poet, her more recent haiku sequences in Morning Haiku (2010) include love poetry and blues poems.
Each essay acknowledges how Sanchez utilized and shifted the dimensions of the form, along with related forms, sonku and tanka, for her socially conscious art. Her first haiku appeared in Love Poems (1973). Sanchez has produced haiku-like poems all her writing life without following the “rules” of the form. Among the primary practitioners discussed are Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, and James Emanuel, all whom influenced Sanchez. 1934), they also provide a literary history of black poetry-a poetry of protest, identification, and pride. Though the essays focus on poet Sonia Sanchez (b. The book is rich in scholarship, and examples demonstrate how haiku has enriched African American poetry. These ten essays, starting with Zheng's excellent introduction, trace the influence of haiku on African American poetry from 1923 and the Harlem Renaissance through the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s to the present.