Bread and Circus
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About this ebook
“Discerning and significant.” —Poetry Foundation
“A sharp memoir in verse.” —LitHub
This powerful and timely collection of autobiographical poems from Yale Young Poets Award Winner and Philadelphia’s former Poet Laureate Airea D. Matthews about the economics of class is a brilliant intellectual and artistic contribution to the ongoing conversation about American inequality.
As a former student of economics, Airea D. Matthews was fascinated and disturbed by 18th-century Scottish economist Adam Smith’s magnum opus The Wealth of Nations. Now, she presents a direct challenge to Smith’s theory of the invisible hand, which claims self-interest is the key to optimal economic outcomes. By juxtaposing redacted texts by Smith and the French Marxist Guy Debord with autobiographical prose and poems, Bread and Circus personally offers how self-interest fails when it reduces people to commodity and spectacle.
A layered collection to be read and reread, with poems that range from tragic to humorous, in forms as varied and nuanced as the ideas the book considers, Bread and Circus asks what it is to have survived, indeed to have flourished, and at what cost. “Full of humane wisdom, this powerful volume forces readers to acknowledge systemic inequity” (Publishers Weekly, starred review) and is ideal for fans of Elizabeth Alexander, Natalie Diaz, Eve Ewing, and Gregory Pardlo.
Airea D. Matthews
Airea D. Matthews was Philadelphia’s 2022–2023 poet laureate. Her first collection of poems is the critically acclaimed Simulacra, which won the 2016 Yale Series of Younger Poets Award. Her work has appeared in Harper’s Bazaar, Poetry, The New York Times, Gulf Coast, VQR, Best American Poets, American Poet, LitHub, Harvard Review, and elsewhere. Matthews holds a BA in economics from the University of Pennsylvania as well as an MFA from the Helen Zell Writers’ Program and an MPA from the Gerald Ford School of Public Policy, both at the University of Michigan. A Pew fellow, she is an associate professor and codirector of the creative writing program at Bryn Mawr College.
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Bread and Circus - Airea D. Matthews
Airea D. Matthews
Bread and Circus
Poems
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Bread and Circus, by Airea D. Matthews, ScribnerFor Fred. Forgiven.
and every thing, now bridles its desires, and limits its anxious longings to two things only—bread, and the games of the circus!
—Juvenal
Legacy Costs
Acknowledgment
It is not from the benevolence of the butcher,
the brewer, or the baker, that we expect
our dinner, but from their regard to their own interest.
—Adam Smith
March, 1969
back at the church the best man draped the groom’s shoulders. passed a flask of hundred proof. a mother fondled her fake pearls. walked the aisles in search of a soloist to replace the cousin who canceled an hour earlier. will you sing His Eyes on the Sparrow or Amazin’ Grace, she asked each guest.
across town on Hanover Street,
a young woman in a taffeta and lace gown huddled on the cold tile of a YWCA bathroom stall. she heard the lobby phone ring incessantly. the receptionist trumpeted her name over the intercom. she balled up wads of Angel Soft and blotted the Revlon fleeing her lash. for the last two hours, the cost of the dress, flowers, drinks, the soloist, the hall, and her mother’s second mortgage to fund the matrimonial circus paraded across an embedded reel. thoughts of a fatherless baby pushed her to decision.
that inevitable bride called a yellow taxi to deliver her to fate. outside, a homeless prophet touched her shoulder while she waited, reassured: it’s better for the baby girl, Honey.
three hours later, an understudy organist played the sorriest wedding march. the bride tripped down the aisle. busted her knee wide open. bled through her stockings and silk slip. her groom, many swigs in, balanced by his best men, could barely stand. her mother ran to the altar to lift her daughter, her sole investment. while an unholy congregation craned their necks and swished their church fans, advertising a local funeral home, to watch a lovely commodity reluctantly agree to her own barter.
Debord’s Redacted Spectacle
The image of blissful social unification through consumption merely [suspends] the consumer’s awareness of the actual divisons until his next disillusionment with some particular commodity. Each new product is ceremoniously acclaimed as a unique creation offering a dramatic shortcut to the promised land of total consummation. But as with the fashionable adoption of seemingly aristocratic first names which end up being given to virtually all individuals of the same age, the objects that promise uniqueness can be offered up for mass consumption only if they have been mass-produced. The prestigiousness of mediocre objects of this kind is solely due to the fact that they have been placed, however briefly, at the center of social life and hailed as a revelation of the unfathomable purposes of production. But the object that was prestigious in the spectacle becomes [the] mundane [once the object] is taken home by its consumer — at the same time as by all its other consumers. Too late, it reveals its essential poverty, a poverty that inevitably reflects the poverty of its production. Meanwhile, some other object is already replacing it as justifica-
tion of the system and demanding its own moment of acclaim.
The Troubles
Man watches his history on the screen with apathy and an occasional passing flicker of horror or indignation.
—Conor Cruise O’Brien, Irish historian
It’s January 1972 and inside
Ma’s television buzzes. Oddly
accented men wearing crucifixes
call for work and housing. Children’s
coattails drag along the seats
of burnt-out cars walling in
their free Derry. Tanks thrum
through the rubble thrown, stones
ricochet off umbrella shields, bullets
plunge into some husbands’ flesh like
rose thorns burrowing chest deep.
A priest waves a handkerchief
as flag of surrender, begging
passage for the shallow-breathed
whose blood slicks his boot.
Unknowns will die cradled
in the arms of strangers
who moments earlier sang
We shall overcome, someday,
faithfully clinging to the same
distant hope that finds Ma
thousands of miles away
on a different continent,
wailing on her bedroom floor,