Description
Permission to Settle fills in the blanks of the application for Permanent Residency with a series of memoir-based poems, capturing common aspects of immigration - the anxiety, and the bureaucracy of application, identity, foreignness, and inadequacy - all while exploring the sense of privilege that comes from the geographically and culturally close immigration journey from the US to Canada as a modern-day settler.
The poems investigate the implicit biases in the forms and the gaps between the messy reality of life lived and the structured and colonial system of boxes and check marks that still seek to categorize "the other" and to harness it in the face of reconciliation. The reader is drawn in through the guise of the familiar, while the playfulness and self-revealing tone of the work reveals a poignancy of meaning and language.
About the author
Contributor Notes
Holly Flauto is a poet, storyteller, writer and learner. Their writing has previously been published in The ex-Puritan, Joyland, and The Rusty Toque. They teach English and Creative Writing at Capilano University. Originally from the US, Holly currently lives in Vancouver, BC.
Editorial Reviews
- Archer Pechawis, performance artist and filmmaker