Heat, Flight, and Density: Xu Jiajia’s Early Poetics of Sensation, Freedom, and Associative Thought
Abstract
This essay introduces and critically frames the early poetic works of Xu Jiajia (徐嘉佳), a young Chinese poet born in 2014. Rather than approaching her writing through the lens of age, pedagogy, or novelty, the essay reads her poems as serious lyric experiments characterized by associative thinking, sensory density, and intuitive structural intelligence. Through close readings of three short poems—“Summer vs Steak”, “Epiphany”, and “Dense”—presented in bilingual Chinese–English form, the column examines how Xu’s work mobilizes contrast, repetition, and metaphor to construct a distinctive poetic logic rooted in sensation rather than explanation. Her poems demonstrate an instinctive grasp of complementarity, freedom, and intensity, revealing a mode of lyric cognition often inaccessible to adult poetic language. Positioned within Verse Version’s commitment to discovering emerging poetic voices across cultures and ages, this essay argues that Xu Jiajia’s work should be read not as “children’s poetry,” but as early-stage lyric intelligence—poetry that reminds us how imagination precedes doctrine, and how genuine poetic force often appears first as heat, flight, and density.