Doubters and Dreamers (Volume 67)
Janice Gould Doubters and Dreamers opens with a question from a young girl faced with the spectacle of Indian effigies lynched and burned âin jestâ before UC Berkeleyâs annual Big Game against âWhatâs a debacle, Mom?â This innocent but telling question marks the girlâs entrĂŠe into the complicated knowledge of her heritage as a mixed-blood Native American of Koyangkâauwi (Concow) Maidu descent. The girl is a young Janice Gould, and the poems and narrations that follow constitute a remarkable work of sustained and courageous self-revelation, retracing the precarious emotional terrain of an adolescence shaped by a motherâs tough love and a growing consciousness of an ancestral and familial past.
In the first half of the book, âTribal History,â Gould ingeniously repurposes the sonnet form to preserve the stories of her mother and aunt, who grew up when âmuleback was the customary mode / of transportâ and the âspirit world was presentââstories of âold waysâ and places claimed in memory but lost in time. Elsewhere, she remembers her motherâs âferocious, upright angerâ and her unexpected tenderness (âLike a miracle, I was still her childâ), culminating in the profound expression of loss that is the poem âOur Motherâs Death.â
In the second half of the book, âIt Was Raining,â Gould tells of the years of lonely self-making and âunfulfilled dreamsâ as she comes to terms with what she has been told are her âcrazy longingsâ as a âItâs been hammered into me / that Iâll be spurned / by a âreal woman,â / the only kind I like.â The writing here commemorates old loves and relationships in language that mingles hope and despair, doubt and devotion, veering at times into dreamlike moments of consciousness. One poem and vignette at a time, Doubters and Dreamers explores what it means to be a mixed-blood Native American who grew up urban, lesbian, and middle class in the West.
Genres:
Poetry
96 Pages