NATURAL HISTORY RAPE MUSEUM
Danielle Pafunda

$15.00

“No other book I know has so thoroughly shaken the fuckwad out of my pudenda. Disclosures: I heard her perform many of these poems at the Lynchian Jewel Box Theater in Seattle (sans cellist!) and was shocked to feel my latent masochistic inner-heterosexual demand that she never stop doing what she does best, all “safe words” be damned. Favorites: ‘You put me in the dress, I’m just wearing it. Externally.’; ‘Stingray’; ‘Punishment’; and her epic serial ‘On the Bearskin Rug in Front of the Fire I Construct the Following Tableau.'” —Timothy Liu, Coldfront

“Years enough have taught me that misogyny doesn’t distinguish between the two, and I’ve come around to recovering the complexities and useful darknesses found within that idea of ‘girl’. Among several poets I consider to be writing towards this recovery is Danielle Pafunda, whose newest book, Natural History Rape Museum, was released just last month by Bloof Books.” —Paula Mendoza, Michigan Quarterly

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SKU: NHRM Category: Tag:

Description

December 2013
6 x 9, 80 pages
Trade paper original
ISBN: 978-0-9826587-5-8

“It feels good,” says Danielle Pafunda, “to conduct the world’s violence on the page. It’s my response to violence without doing or incurring much violence. It’s how I navigate through it.”

The fifth poetry collection by Danielle Pafunda, Natural History Rape Museum centers around an unnamed speaker and her intimate/adversary, the fuckwad, in pieces interrupted (or violated) by their boxed-in titles. Further interrupting this narrative are a prose sequence and a menagerie of objects/animals/elements borne as totems by the speaker—a lump of coal, a stingray, a cord of wood, a wolf spider, an earthworm, the fly. The volume culminates in four linked essays on the subject of pain: The Bid for Pain, The Manner in Which Pain Becomes Me, Pain Beak-Pecks a Figurine, and Extraterrestrial Painsake.

Exploring the more grotesque corners of the Gurlesque aesthetic, in Natural History Rape Museum Pafunda ventriloquizes through the unstable identities of her characters to create creepy tableaux that resemble—despite their vivid, violent excesses—the world we know.

Additional information

Author

Pafunda, Danielle