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Field Study
Field Study | Chet'la Sebree
3 posts | 1 read
Winner of the 2020 James Laughlin Award from the Academy of American Poets "Layered, complex, and infinitely compelling, Chet’la Sebree’s Field Study is a daring exploration of the self and our interactions with others—a meditation on desire, race, loss and survival." --Natasha Trethewey, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Memorial Drive Chet’la Sebree’s Field Study is a genre-bending exploration of black womanhood and desire, written as a lyrical, surprisingly humorous, and startlingly vulnerable prose poem I am society’s eraser shards—bits used to fix other people’s sh*t, then discarded. Somehow still a wet nurse, from actual babes to Alabama special elections. Seeking to understand the fallout of her relationship with a white man, the poet Chet’la Sebree attempts a field study of herself. Scientifically, field studies are objective collections of raw data, devoid of emotion. But during the course of a stunning lyric poem, Sebree’s control over her own field study unravels as she attempts to understand the depth of her feelings in response to the data of her life. The result is a singular and provocative piece of writing, one that is formally inventive, playfully candid, and soul-piercingly sharp. Interspersing her reflections with Tweets, quips from TV characters, and excerpts from the Black thinkers—Audre Lorde, Maya Angelou, Tressie McMillan Cottom—that inspire her, Sebree analyzes herself through the lens of a society that seems uneasy, at best, with her very presence. She grapples with her attraction to, and rejection of, whiteness and white men; probes the malicious manifestation of colorism and misogynoir throughout American history and media; and struggles with, judges, and forgives herself when she has more questions than answers. “Even as I accrue these notes,” Sebree writes, “I’m still not sure I’ve found the pulse.” A poem of love, heartbreak, womanhood, art, sex, Blackness, and America—sometimes all at once—Field Study throbs with feeling, searing and tender. With uncommon sensitivity and precise storytelling, Sebree makes meaning out of messiness and malaise, breathing life into a scientific study like no other.
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Taylor
Field Study | Chet'la Sebree
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Pickpick

A fascinating series of fragments on love and lust, relationships, and (interracial) dating.

Sebree fills this book with cultural references—both high and low—for a work that is media obsessed. Entertainment obsessed. Literature obsessed.

It‘s also filled with uncertainty, which I appreciated; doubt and longing and lostness. I‘m a sucker for anti-confidence as well as confidence; this combines them both.

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Taylor
Field Study | Chet'la Sebree

How much of want is need?

How much of fear is why I‘ve been single for five years?

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mklong
Field Study | Chet'la Sebree
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Hello #Group L! I‘ve been in a poetry group with a couple of y‘all before and I‘m looking forward to another round of #LMPBC. Here are a few from my TBR stack. Anything grab you? Or totally turn you off?

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TheBookKeepers I haven‘t read any of these so I‘m down for whatever you chose! My top picks would be Brute, Field Study, and If They Come for Us 3y
TheBookKeepers Oh - whoops I will be reading Post Colonial this month with my previous lmpbc group 3y
WanderingBookaneer I have read (and adored) Postcolonial Love Poem. I‘m okay with any of the others. (edited) 3y
TheBookKeepers @WanderingBookaneer I‘m so excited to get this in the mail to start from our current group! I remembered seeing your review here on Litsy for it 🤩 3y
LazyDays I'm up for anything 3y
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