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Abstract

[...]they are just different types of death: death from remembering is the same as death from forgetting. Not only is the foreignness of the land in which the exile finds himself clearly illuminated, but so is the more fearful realisation that the place that once was home is now equally foreign and inaccessible. Since exile is another form of death, whether his poetry is about the massacre or about exile, it will contain corpses. [...]this poetry is irrelevant and incomprehensible in the land of exile and banned in the land that was once home. [...]it drifts away. [...]pre exile, a poet of China, emphasizing the blood relationship between his early work and his native land; secondly a poet writing in Chinese, exploring the specific limitations and possibilities of Chineseness among languages; more recently he defines himself as a poet writing in "Yanglish," a designation which recognises that his poems are foreign even to Chinese speakers.

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Copyright New Zealand Electronic Poetry Centre Mar 2012