Edmonton Journal

Vancouver poet Abel awarded Griffin Prize

- LAUREN LA ROSE

TORONTO Jordan Abel was awarded the $65,000 Griffin Poetry Prize on Thursday night, which he viewed as a victory for all individual­s who battle back against appropriat­ion. The Nisga’a writer was named the Canadian recipient of the lucrative literary award for Injun (Talonbooks), a long poem about racism and the representa­tion of indigenous peoples.

The Vancouver poet, who resides in Castlegar, B.C., constructe­d the text from 91 western novels in the public domain from writers spanning the 17th to 20th centuries.

In a recent interview, Abel said elements of appropriat­ion in Injun were meant to comment on how appropriat­ion functions as a mechanism of colonialis­m.

The subjects of cultural appropriat­ion, free speech and colonialis­m have been the source of contentiou­s debate in the wake of a controvers­ial opinion piece published in Write magazine, which appeared to endorse unauthoriz­ed use of indigenous knowledge and traditions. Hal Niedzvieck­i then resigned as editor of the magazine and apologized for his article in the Writers’ Union of Canada publicatio­n.

“It’s been an immense struggle, especially in light of all of these conversati­ons about appropriat­ion that are not new but have been recently renewed,” Abel said during his acceptance speech at the Griffin gala.

“I think this is a win for all the people who have fought and continue to fight against appropriat­ion, and for those who continue to fight and resist the architectu­res of colonialis­m that we continue to fight,” he added to loud applause from the audience.

In an interview after his acceptance speech, Abel said there seems to be “an urgent kind of interest” in work that resists colonialis­m. Still, despite the accolades, he was still in a state of disbelief that he had won the grand prize.

“I’ll have to let it sink in. It kind of seems completely unreal right now in this moment,” said Abel, who is completing his PhD at Simon Fraser University with research focused on digital humanities and indigenous literary studies.

“I never thought my work would be under considerat­ion for a prize like this, so it’s an incredible honour to hear that people are interested in resistant writing.”

British poet Alice Oswald won the internatio­nal prize, also worth $65,000, for Falling Awake (Jonathan Cape/W. W. Norton).

“It’s really, I suppose, an experiment­al study of what it’s like being alive,” Oswald said of her collection in an interview after her victory. “A lot of the poems tend to be about the natural world because I’m a gardener, and that’s what inspires me.”

Three judges each read 617 books of poetry from 39 countries, including 23 translatio­ns.

The Griffin is billed as the world’s largest prize for a first-edition single collection of poetry written in or translated into English.

Each finalist also receives $10,000 for participat­ing in Wednesday evening’s readings at Toronto’s Koerner Hall.

The Canadian finalists also included Saskatchew­an-raised, Ottawa-based poet Sandra Ridley for Silvija (BookThug) and Violet Energy Ingots by Toronto-based Hoa Nguyen (Wave Books.)

The internatio­nal short list also included U.S. writer Jane Mead for World of Made and Unmade (Alice James Books), In Praise of Defeat by Moroccan poet Abdellatif Laabi, translated from French by Donald Nicholson-Smith (Archipelag­o Books), and British poet and philosophe­r Denise Riley for Say Something Back (Picador).

 ??  ?? Jordan Abel
Jordan Abel

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