Description
Set in Southeast Louisiana—one of the last regions in the contemporary United States to resist full Americanization—Tooth Gaps in the Archives traces how place-based cultural memory persists beyond its disappearing geography and amid a cycle of forced migration, an emerging domestic climate diaspora, and the slow violence enacted against a people whose power has been systematically withheld through regulatory capture. In Tooth Gaps, Louisiana is not rendered as the unlucky exception or a site of tragedy, but as a resource extraction colony, its people asked to disappear quietly to facilitate the commodification and consumption of their land, labor, and culture.
Moving between lyric poems and documentary prose, Tooth Gaps drops the reader directly into the speaker’s interior and exterior worlds without mediation, creating an immersive, embodied experience that refuses abstraction and distance. From the very first to the very last page, it insists on the body as archive and frames the very existence of the people of Louisiana as an act of resistance.
About Francis Dylan Waguespack
Francis Dylan Waguespack (he/they) is a painter and Pushcart-nominated poet from New Orleans who writes about the politics of disasters and being from a place and in a body that both live under threat. He is 34, and… MORE