Arlene Keizer, an Afro-Caribbean American poet and scholar, writes about the literature, lived experience, theory, and visual art of the African Diaspora. The recipient of an Academy of American Poets Prize, she is the author of Black Subjects: Identity Formation in the Contemporary Narrative of Slavery, and her poems and articles have appeared in African American Review, American Literature, the Kenyon Review, Poem-a-Day, and TriQuarterly, among others.
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"The splendid canvas of these serially interlaced poems is the life and death of mid-20th-century queer African American artist Beauford Delaney. Reverent and reminiscent of Delaney's own painterly forms, Keizer's poetry fulfills that long-held dream of ut pictura poesis, verse that attains the sensory force of painting." -Marlon B. Ross, author of Sissy Insurgencies: A Racial Anatomy of Unfit Manliness "Arlene Keizer's award-winning book of poems Fraternal Light: On Painting While Black is a richly imagined poetic exploration of the great African American queer painter Beauford Delaney as well as being an ekphrastic paean to his work. These eclectic poems, whose reigning genius is the Caribbean mythological figure Papa Bois, will inspire readers to view the work of Delaney, an under-appreciated 20th-century figurative and abstract painter, which in turn will inspire them to reread these inventive poems that brilliantly play with form as much as Delaney played with different painterly traditions." -Sharon Dolin, author of Imperfect Present