Smokii Sumac is a Ktunaxa and transmasculine poet whose first book of poetry, you are enough: love poems for the end of the world was published in 2018 by Kegedonce Press.[1] The unpublished draft manuscript of the book, then titled "#haikuaday," won the inaugural Indigenous Voices Award for Unpublished English Poetry, while the book itself was awarded the 2019 Indigenous Voices Award for English Poetry.[2]
In addition to writing, Sumac dedicates much of his work to Indigenous and LGBTQ communities.[5] He currently serves as Interim Senior Manager for Education And Employment with the Ktunaxa Nation.[6] Formerly, he was a PhD Candidate in Indigenous Studies at Trent University, where he researched "coming home" stories from a Ktunaxa adoptee and two-spirit perspective.[7]
His mother serves as Chief of the Shuswap Indian Band.[8]
Literary work
His work has been published in Write Magazine, Electric City Magazine and Canadian Literature.you are enough has been favorably reviewed in publications including Muskrat Magazine[9] and Transmotion.[10] He has performed at various events and venues including the Queer Arts Festival in 2018 and PoetryNOW: 11th Annual Battle of the Bards in 2019. In 2020 Sumac was named as a finalist for the Dayne Ogilvie Prize for emerging LGBTQ writers.[11]
Sumac's poetry is noted for its frankness about matters of sex and grief.[12] Literary critic James Mackay discusses Sumac's work as a product of social media, comparing it to Instapoetry, arguing that "the hashtags in Sumac's work serve to restructure the poems away from being singular units and into becoming fluid and interlinked units of a larger discussion."[13]
Publications
"Just Make Me Look Like Aquaman." Tea and Bannock, 2020.
you are enough: love poems for the end of the world.Kegedonce, 2018.
"All My Relations": Aunties, Cousins, And Indigenous Methods Of Recognition. 2017 Write Magazine.
"No Pipelines On Stolen Native Land". 2017 Electric City Magazine.
"Two Spirit and Queer Indigenous Resurgence through Sci-Fi Futurisms, Doubleweaving, and Historical Re-Imaginings: A Review Essay" published on July 31, 2018, for Kent University.
^Chazan, May; Baldwin, Melissa; Evans, Patricia (2018). Unsettling Activisms: Critical Interventions on Aging, Gender, and Social Change. Canadian Scholars' Press. p. 16.
^Morford, Ashley Caranto (February 2019). ""(big)/little" moments of world-building revolution: a review of Smokii Sumac's you are enough: love poems for the end of the world". Transmotion. 5 (1): 336–339.