200 contemporary poetry
expectations. Gunning offers an insightful reading of the texture
and porosity of Nagra’s poetry:
Nagra’s portrayal of working class Punjabis is always less
about verisimilitude to a reifi ed culture, or an authentic
capture of an idiom, as it is concerned with the possibilities
of refracting this speech into his poems and of dislocating the
expectations of an audience who receive a racialized perform-
ance as indicative of a particular way of being in the world.
The voices that speak in Nagra’s verse are alienated; they
reveal less of the worlds that their named speakers inhabit
than of the poet’s concerns that his enunciation will always
be over-determined by the pre-text of racist or patronizing
liberal-multicultural expectations of the British Asian poet.^79
This textual density and transcription of radical speech patterns
is evident in ‘The Man Who Would Be English’. Seeking assimi-
lation into a community through football, the speaker becomes
part of a group: ‘we plundered up gulps of golden rounds for the
great game.’^80 Within this poem there lies a carefully orchestrated
tension between vernacular such as ‘just for kicks’, and the more
archaic language of ‘lark-about days of school’ (p. 15 ). These
phrases add an intertextual intrusion into the layering of the text
- performing a ventriloquising of familiar phrases. This need to
assimilate phonetically is a survival strategy, which requires that
the speaker’s voice is ‘passed’ ‘into theirs’ (p. 15 ). A desire to be
unobtrusive is asserted by the negatives: ‘I wasn’t Black or Latin or
/ managed by a turbaned ghost’ (p. 15 ). But the assertion is chal-
lenged by the intrusion of a wife’s voice, clearly marked in stacca-
toed syntax, taking her husband to task for his affi liation. The wife
brutally emphasises the degrees of difference: ‘Lookk lookk ju nott
British ju rrr blackkk.. .!!!’ (p. 15 ). Another poem, ‘The Speaking
of Bagwinder Singh Sagoo’, renders a voice which criticises the
sexualisation of the ‘western’ woman selected for him in the UK.
Malapropisms add to the texture of his berating. His beau’s actions
towards the praying father threaten to ‘give him cardigan arrest’
and cosmetics are described as ‘odour toilet’ (p. 27 ). The language
of television advertising and consumption intrudes upon the