Victoria Chang is the author of the new book of poems Barbie Chang. Her other books include the poetry collection The Boss and the children's picture book Is Mommy?, and her work has appeared in a variety of publications, including Kenyon Review and American Poetry Review. She lives in Los Angeles.
Q: How did you come up with the idea for Barbie Chang?
Q: How did you come up with the idea for Barbie Chang?
A: I wrote all these poems in first person initially. One
day, the name "Barbie Chang" popped into my head and I thought that
was funny, paradoxical, and frankly impossible because Barbie is the iconic
American dream female and a Chang, well, isn't.
I changed all the poems to third person with the character
of Barbie Chang and then I worked on the poems for another year--changing the
person really opened up the poems for me as a writer.
Q: Can you say more about the role you think Barbie plays in
societal assumptions and also in your collection?
A: As I mentioned above, she's the image of perfection. In
my mind, that image was never reality, and this has been changing but society
has been slow to change. And I suppose my book is a kind of exploration of
that, deconstruction of that.
Q: In a review of Barbie Chang in the Los Angeles Review of
Books, Kristina Marie Darling writes, “Victoria Chang’s new collection, Barbie
Chang, reveals, visibly and poignantly, the ways that ‘looking’ can be
symptomatic of what is most broken and dangerous in our culture.” What do you
think of that?
A: I think that this is a smart statement. That review was
very well-written and thought out. I think of this as the looking at women in
our culture as toxic--the objectification of women. And the idea of seeing is a
something I explore in this book too--how POC and women are often
invisible.
So it's this interesting paradox--POC and women want to be
seen, but most of the time, not in the ways that society and others see them.
I've been debating with some people on FB who think it is
their right to write from the perspective of anyone they want: "dogs,
horses, pilots," including the stories of POC.
This is also a problem of "looking" that Darling
talks about--who has the right to look, who has the right to tell these
stories, who has the stories? Well, we do. And that's how #ownvoices emerged on
Twitter.
Q: Barbie Chang includes two sections titled “Dear P.” How
do you see those parts of the collection connecting with the other poems?
A: The middle sequence of sonnets were older poems from
before my prior book, The Boss, in a manuscript I chose not to publish.
And the end Dear P. poems were written after I put the middle
ones in. I don't know why I put them in at the time, but in retrospect, I think
it was to complicate the manuscript that was all in the same form.
I think adding these made the book more expansive and
mirrored my own ideas about intergenerational racism and how racist views and
closed-mindedness get passed down from one generation to the next.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: A series of prose poems called OBIT. A few are online and
I've begun letting them out in the world. I'm almost finished, I think. They
are in the shape of obituaries and what I call a distillation of grief after my
mom passed away.
A: Well, gosh, I don't know. I am a generous person. I
like generous and loyal people. I can't stand competitive and jealous
people more than anything (and there are a LOT of those people in the literary
world). I like chumming around with people who lift each other up.
I can be very quiet and very passionate and outspoken at the
same time. I can change my mind in a heartbeat. I'm very pleased about how the
younger generation is breaking open the literary world/poetry on Twitter even
though initially I was afraid of them. I love change like this but can
also intellectually deconstruct it without getting emotional.
I am very ambitious for the work and as a woman, no
longer apologize for being ambitious for the work. In general, I am very
ambitious and no longer apologize for that either because I never see any men
apologizing and only see people cut down women for being so.
I am always interested in the new, the original, the
inventive, across all art forms and people. I'm sure there are lots of other
things about me and my writing that would interest only me, so I'll stop here.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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