Plain Burned Things

A Poetics of the Unsayable
Leah SOUFFRANT
Date de publication
7 mars 2017
Résumé
"Leah Souffrant, with laudably quiet gestures, reaches lyrically into literature's silent places to delineate the thermodynamics of the lacuna. Working the pauses, she does a Duras: nimble, stunned, alert. Hats off to Souffrant for the elliptical beauty she unearths and--with interpretive deftness--performs!" --Wayne Koestenbaum How...
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Date de première publication du titre 7 mars 2017
ISBN 9782875621108
EAN-13 9782875621108
Référence 121085-96
Nombre de pages de contenu principal 138
Format 16 x 24 x .8 cm
Poids 305 g

Prologue

Introduction: Plain Burned Things: Attending to the Unsayable

Chapter 1: No Mark, Nothing: A Maternal Poetics of the Unsayable

Attending to Blank SpaceAttending to Blank Space: the maternal I is ontological
Sylvia Plath's Being-Saying: Mother as Shipwrecked
Plath's Surrealist Prospero
Dark Ceiling: Plath's "Child"
It is a terrible thing to be so open: Plath's Three Women
Jean Rhys's Being-Saying: Not-thinking Maternal Grief
Jean Rhys's Good Morning Midnight: no mark, nothing
Jean Rhys's Voyage in the Dark: Everything drops away
Rachel Zucker's Being-Saying: They say less screaming

Chapter 2: You Saw Nothing: An Erotics of Witness

Perception as reaching toward
What does it mean to see?
Iconographies of the Unsayable: Writing is also not speaking
The invisible meets the felt, Or what "pricks" us
When you hear nothing: Silence is film's Unsaying
The Touching Testimonial: Erotics as Unsayable witness
When witness is a liminal space
Caesura: Plain, Burned Things

Chapter 3: Poetic Time Machine: Translation as Interpretation of Interstitial Space

Interstitial Space: Translation as ekphrasis means translation as poetry
Attending to Omission: Translating across gaps means translating into gaps
Spacing and Pacing: What you see is not what you get
Anne Carson's Time Machine
Eurydike's unbracketing of Mrs. Ramsay
Behind the Transparency

Chapter 4: A Looking Through "The Glass Essay": Reaching toward absence might be seeing the Unsayable

She looks at looking through glass
"I": Awakening the reader's attention
"She": Triangulating Women, Connections & the Barriers Between Them
"Three": The Triangulation of reach embodied
"Whacher": Paying attention to the Unsayable
"Fumbling": Encountering absent presences
Whacher of Heartache: Poetics of the Reach

List of Images

Acknowledgments

Bibliography

Index

"Leah Souffrant, with laudably quiet gestures, reaches lyrically into literature's silent places to delineate the thermodynamics of the lacuna. Working the pauses, she does a Duras: nimble, stunned, alert. Hats off to Souffrant for the elliptical beauty she unearths and--with interpretive deftness--performs!" --Wayne Koestenbaum How...

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