Cheng Sait Chia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born1940 (1940)
Singapore
Died1981 (aged 4041)
Resting placeWilliam Black Cemetery
Halifax, Nova Scotia
NationalityChinese-Canadian
Cheng Sait Chia
Born1940 (1940)
Singapore
Died1981 (aged 4041)
Resting placeWilliam Black Cemetery
Halifax, Nova Scotia
NationalityChinese-Canadian
GenreMaritimer Imagism
poetry
Notable worksTurned Clay

Cheng Sait Chia (1940–1981) was a Chinese-Canadian poet whose work was only ever published posthumously. Her only published work is a 75-page book titled Turned Clay, released through Fiddlehead Poetry Books in 1981 after Chia's death. Her poetry has not been featured in any collections or anthologies thus far.[1]

Cheng Sait Chia, a Chinese immigrant who settled on the east coast of Canada, was born in Singapore in 1940 to Siow Peck Liong and Teh Kim Heo. Her husband, born in 1943, was Tzu Tit. She died of cancer at the age of 41 and was buried in the William Black Cemetery of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Turned Clay was released that same year, 1981, following Chia's death.[2][3]

Poet, essayist, and University of Toronto Canadian literature professor George Elliott Clarke is mentioned by Arc Poetry Magazine as the one who "rediscovered" Chia's poetry. He noted that "her work, though infused by her illness with the theme of death, exhibits an exhilarating refusal of luxury, heroic stoicism, and a stern and bracing morbidity." A recurring theme in Chia's writing is death, which can be attributed to her terminal illness serving as a constant reminder that her own end was near.[2]

Rediscovering Chia

References

Further reading

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