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This Is One Way to Dance

Essays

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the linked essays that make up her debut collection, This Is One Way to Dance, Sejal Shah explores culture, language, family, and place. Throughout the collection, Shah reflects on what it means to make oneself visible and legible through writing in a country that struggles with race and maps her identity as an American, South Asian American, writer of color, and feminist. This Is One Way to Dance draws on Shah's ongoing interests in ethnicity and place: the geographic and cultural distances between people, both real and imagined. Her memoir in essays emerges as Shah wrestles with her experiences growing up and living in western New York, an area of stark racial and economic segregation, as the daughter of Gujarati immigrants from India and Kenya. These essays also trace her movement over twenty years from student to teacher and meditate on her travels and life in New England, New York City, and the Midwest, as she considers what it means to be of a place or from a place, to be foreign or familiar.
Shah invites us to consider writing as a somatic practice, a composition of digressions, repetitions—movement as transformation, incantation. Her essays—some narrative, others lyrical and poetic—explore how we are all marked by culture, gender, and race; by the limits of our bodies, by our losses and regrets, by who and what we love, by our ambivalences, and by trauma and silence. Language fractures in its attempt to be spoken. Shah asks and attempts to answer the question: How do you move in such a way that loss does not limit you? This Is One Way to Dance introduces a vital new voice to the conversation about race and belonging in America.

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    • Kirkus

      April 1, 2020
      An immigrant memoir in essays "about growing up Indian outside of India, in non-Indian places." In a series of previously published personal essays, creative writing professor Shah recounts 20 years of moving around, forming her ethnic identity in America's cities and towns. The daughter of "Gujarati parents born in India and East Africa," the author ponders how one moves in a "body often viewed as other." How, she asks, "do you claim the I, the person dancing, the person leading the dance?" In "Skin," she introduces us to "a brown girl here [in the U.S.], never just a girl." She portrays a life rich with places visited and lived in as well as family, friends, writing, and exuberant Indian weddings--including, finally, her own, with its vibrant clothing, jewelry, and especially dancing, an "important part of how I understood myself to be Indian." As an adolescent, Shah read serial novels, like those of Nancy Drew, but "there was no one like [me] in any of them." She chronicles how, forever in search of a permanent teaching position, she moved through a series of writer-in-residence jobs, supplemented by fellowships, workshops, and retreats. She recalls watching Mira Nair's film Monsoon Wedding, listening to its "effervescent" music: "I remember it still as a bodily sensation, the visceral pull toward the screen." Luscious Indian food abounds, but the author shuns cooking: "I didn't want to be anyone's passage to India." Shah also describes her experience at Burning Man, where she drank scotch and dropped acid: "I wanted to burn. I wanted to be free." Despite her significant time in the U.S., the author remains an Indian American (no dash) writer who has lived a bifurcated life, both sides of which she revels in: "Words are surfacing; this is one way to dance. Words are rising: this is how to dance." Despite inevitable repetition, this is a sensitive, poignant collection.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 13, 2020
      The poetic, probing debut from short story writer and essayist Shah forcefully tackles the complicated intersection of “identity, language, movement, family, place, and race.” Written over two decades, starting in 1999, the selections explore her Gujarati Indian heritage, her upbringing in western New York, and her time in Massachusetts and New York City teaching creative writing. Closely attentive to nuances of race, she reflects on the marginal status accorded South Asian identity in both popular culture and academic writing. Whether remembering what Mira Nair’s early film Mississippi Masala meant to her (“The desire to see one’s self and community reflected runs deep”) or reminiscing on her childhood home (“Ranch houses, when I was growing up, were not cool,” but her family’s was the place she “always felt safe”), Shah is insightfully self-reflective. She also makes lyrical use of language, as when she ruminates on summer nights that have “a particular kind of warm, which is not too hot, not too humid, not anything but enough to make you glad that your skin is the only layer between you and the world.” In this sterling collection, Shah has created a striking self-portrait.

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  • English

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