Table of contents
Poem / Counterpoint

Broken Sonnets for the Anthropocene

The speaker in this broken sonnet form utters disobedience for structures that extract care in the Anthropocene.
The silhouette of a person shows against the deep magenta and red hues of a sunset, with the sky otherwise dark. An island rests in the distance.

Kanok Sulaiman/Getty Images

“Broken Sonnets for the Anthropocene” is part of the collection Poets Resist, Refuse, and Find a Way Through. Read the introduction to the collection here.

Sneha Subramanian Kanta teaches literature and creative writing. An award-winning writer, her work has received recognition and support from several institutions including the Ontario Arts Council, The Writers’ Union of Canada, The Writers’ Trust of Canada, Rutgers-Camden Poets, and Scholars Retreat, among others. Her work has been widely anthologized internationally, including in Between Paradise & Earth: Eve Poems, The Penguin Book of Indian Poets, and Third Space: An Anthology of South Asian Poetry. She is one of the founding editors of Parentheses Journal.

Republish

You may republish this article, either online and/or in print, under the Creative Commons CC BY-ND 4.0 license. We ask that you follow these simple guidelines to comply with the requirements of the license.

In short, you may not make edits beyond minor stylistic changes, and you must credit the author and note that the article was originally published on SAPIENS.

Accompanying photos are not included in any republishing agreement; requests to republish photos must be made directly to the copyright holder.

Republish

We’re glad you enjoyed the article! Want to republish it?

This article is currently copyrighted to SAPIENS and the author. But, we love to spread anthropology around the internet and beyond. Please send your republication request via email to editor•sapiens.org.

Accompanying photos are not included in any republishing agreement; requests to republish photos must be made directly to the copyright holder.