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Richard SikenA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
“Little Beast” (2005) puts Siken in conversation with an array of contemporary gay male poets, who, at around this time, addressed the intersection of desire and violence (what Glück’s intro to the book calls “purgatorial recklessness”). Seven years earlier, D. A. Powell published his first collection of poetry, Tea (Wesleyan University Press, 1998). As with Siken’s poem, Powell’s poetry confronts lust, harm, and destruction. “[D]ead boys make the best lovers,” Powell declares in one of the poems in Tea. A few years after Crush came out, Ronaldo Wilson’s second book, Poems of the Black Object (Futurepoem Books, 2009), explored the link between being gay, sex, exploitation, and degradation.
Yet Powell’s poems center on the AIDS crisis, and Wilson’s poems confront racial issues. Siken’s poem doesn’t directly address a specific social or political event, which adds to the poem’s elusive and mysterious quality. By its very existence, however, it not only adds to a long line of poetry about being gay, but it also underscores that even seemingly mundane events like a barbeque or a house party can be ripe for the politics of sex and desire and the social aspect of who determines what is acceptable in society and what isn’t.
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By Richard Siken