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978-1-63243-078-6 La Chica's Field Guide to Banzai Living-Front Cover.jpg

La Chica’s Field Guide to Banzai Living

By Jennifer Hasegawa

From Omnidawn

From the small towns strung along the coast of the Big Island of Hawai‘i to the land-locked landscapes of Paraguay to the volcanic surface of Venus, this is a field guide to flora, fauna, and mineralia encountered, real and imagined.

Packed tightly into exploratory rocket segments, these poems ignite our gravest flaws to send our grandest potentials into orbit, sprinkling us all with an antidotal salve to viewing any life as ordinary.


Praise for…

Hasegawa’s surreal, spectacular intelligence crackles through La Chica’s Field Guide to Banzai Living like high-voltage current through a trunk line. Like its throw-down title, this book mixes the flirty with the elucidating and the go-for-broke. . . . Many poems reveal Hasegawa’s tender attachment to family in her native Hawai‘i, to the sagas of daily life and natural beauty there, which bow but don’t break under the ongoing pressures of colonization. This may be the key to Hasegawa’s poetics: the resilience, the fierce intelligence, the banzai resolve to ‘live for ten thousand years’, not as a war cry but as a love letter, To Anyone Who Can’t Get Home.

Mary Burger, author of Then Go On

Welcome to the Kingdom, its taxonomies and subjugations, its streets and kick ass bards. There are many ways to read La Chica’s Field Guide: a testament to the exponential speed of inequities; a chronicling of a third-generation Japanese American woman’s kamikaze-like memory, witness and resistance; an invocation of the epic power of the familial and the communal as evidenced by the simplest joys and our deepest sorrows. Amidst all of it, is the brilliant, resolute, invincible language of Hasegawa. ‘Astounding alien / clean progenitor of the / new tongue of the ages. She / is here.

Aja Couchois Duncan, author of Restless Continent


Buckle up for Jennifer Hasegawa’s exhilarating ride, whatever sort of displaced being you might be—from immigrant to extraterrestrial—and consult this manual. Follow the poems as they careen through assorted omens and ‘ghosts of sovereignty.’ Touching down in Hawai‘i, California, and other parts of the world, Hasegawa carries her baggage with aplomb. She’s all-too-aware of how old family folkways can linger with the ‘slow-burrowing hoodoo/of suggestion.’ And she’s brazen enough to push through to the next realm of possibilities . . . Let her show you the turns—both thorny and tender— and you just might awaken there.

Molly Bendall, author of Watchful

In the West, the word “banzai” was mostly recognized as the WWII battle cry of kamikaze pilots, but in truth, the word literally means 10,000 years and is associated with wishes for long life and celebration. It is a word that is both complex and compelling. The same could be said for the poems in Hasegawa’s La Chica’s Field Guide to Banzai Living. The collection takes us from Hawai‘i to the U.S. Continent to Babylon to outer space, and Hasegawa’s use of story is both empowering and arresting. . . . What I admire most about Hasegawa’s poems is how she uses darkness to reveal what the world today desperately needs—the presence of light.

Lisa Linn Kanae, author of Sista Tongue 

 

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Poetry

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jubilat, Number 38

NOW


Photography


Collage


Videos

Making Space: The first 2024 Alta Mesa Center for the Arts reading featuring Dawn Angelicca Barcelona, Celeste Chan, Grace Loh Prasad, and Jennifer Hasegawa. Hosted in collaboration with Maker, Mentor, Muse and facilitated by Candy Shue and Maw Shein Win.

 

The Booksmith presents an evening of readings with Desirée Alvarez, Anthony Cody, Jennifer Hasegawa and Kimberly Reyes on October 29,2020.

 

Reading for the virtual Dia de los Muertos/Day of the Dead SF - Festival of the Altars in which we offer a collaborative ritual with poetry, music, dance, and altar installations.

In this presentation, I read a section of my poem, “Air, Born,” in honor of the East altar, calling the element of air. The East altar is dedicated to our ancestral children, the interconnectedness of life and death, and all things seen and unseen.

 

Videopoems I created for La Chica’s Field Guide to Banzai Living.

All videos are taken from inside my apartment during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

 

An interview and reading from Litseen’s “The Write Stuff” series: Jennifer Hasegawa on the Light Shining Out from Our Navels.

 

A series of video recordings of contemporary poets reading from their work, prompted by the Covid-19 pandemic and subsequent cancellations, shut-downs and isolations; a reading series you can enjoy in the safety of your own protected space: Emily Murman, Tony Iantosca, Jennifer Hasegawa, Joshua Marie Wilkinson + Claire Farley : virtual reading series #23

Daly City Public Library Celebrates Local Authors: A Virtual Bookfest: "Storage Unit for the Spirit House" by Maw Shein Win. Featuring Maw Shein Win, Jennifer Hasegawa, Jenny Qi, and Audrey T. Williams.

Talk and reading for Healing Around Race: Creative Writing Workshop for the Oakland Asian Cultural Center with Shizue Seigel, Eth-Noh-Tec storytellers Robert Kikuchi Yngojo and Nancy Wang, poet/KFPFA journalist Dennis J Bernstein, and poet/musician/KPFA & POO DJ Avotcja.

 

Reading for Sacred Grounds Open Mic Virtual Venue. The Sacred Grounds Open Mic is the longest running poetry open mic in the US with many thanks to the gracious Dan Brady.

 

Reading for the launch of Vallum17:1 "Home"


Essays

Just over 25 years ago, on September 12, 1993, I stood in the humid early morning air at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Cape Canaveral FL.

My co-workers from the UC Berkeley Space Sciences Lab and I were there to watch the launch of the Space Shuttle Discovery, which held our telescope in its cargo bay.

 

How can it be that representative voices of this conference about women in computing — one rising to the top for the first 24 hours and one rising to the top a year later — are not the voices of women?

 

A few weeks ago, I accompanied a team of journalists to the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota to cover the peoples’ resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL). I joined them as a photographer.


Radio

In this Flashpoints radio documentary, I talk with Hawai‘i County Mayor Harry Kim, Hawai‘i County Deputy Planner Daryn Arai, and Hawai‘ian language practitioner and educator, Kahi Wight.