Guernica Magazine

Back Draft: Rachel Eliza Griffiths

The poet on radical revision, our reflections, and photographing poets.
Photograph by Nicholas Nichols, courtesy of Rachel Eliza Griffiths

Mirrors are simple machines. Our relationship with them, however, is a thing of great complexity. They possess a haunting kind of mastery over us, turning us toward and sometimes against ourselves. They show us who we are, at least until we look away.

A celebrated poet and photographer, Rachel Eliza Griffiths has made a career of exploring how we might see our own image in a different light. In her latest collection, Seeing the Body, Griffiths brings together poetry and photography to powerful effect, providing the reader with an experience that’s both visually and emotionally arresting; the book tells the story of her mother’s death in 2014. When I asked Rachel Eliza why mirrors play such a critical role in this collection, she explained that they present a map not just of “our moods but our genealogy, our lineage.” Looking at herself in the mirror, she always recognizes her mother’s face.

Ben Purkert for Guernica

Guernica: Is it common for you to revise like this? To cut everything but the end?

: I’m a big fan of radical revisions. Maybe being a

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