In Mannequin of our times, Vandana Kumar imagines the insights culled from the banal and mundane aspects of living. However, this living takes place on the edge of a civilization falling into ruins following the pandemic. In some ways, Kumar's poetic vision leads the reader toward an understanding that not much is changing during this global historical upheaval. She writes poignant lines about the human condition such as
the history of grief
is too old
to have started this year
and too young
to end with it.
With these lines, we sense Kumar struggling to situate the contemporary into the universal. The universal may take precedence, but personal experience is the wordsmith's true fodder. These poems speak of the contemporary through the lens of particular observations that engage with our historical moment. The universal person is questioned, however. Mannequin of our times is an experience of living within a world on hinge, a world facing dubious battles of its own.
The cracks within
Why do you shy away?
Let me see you in the day
the glint of grey
peeping through your burgundy
the silver cloud line
in the midst of sunshine
why do you act demure?
Return that wanton laughter
why so tame this noon?
You heaved some nights
delirious under the sheets
just us
and a quarter moon
why are your papers?
No longer in disarray
why is the garden trimmed?
That broken pot was never meant to be fixed
and a part of your heart
like a country’s porous border
kept open for invasion.
This collection stayed with me for its poetry but as much for its dimensionality. These poems are not limited, they spread their wings out and about in terms of theme as well as voice.