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In these 2 volumes Enrique gathers fresh voices and sharp tongues
to speak of the art of Tarot as the art of living magically.
Forty-seven tarot luminaries (readers, historians, philosophers,
magicians, and scientists alike) gather here to offer unique
perspectives on what we can think of as divination with bones,
human bones. Artists, deck creators, and modern-day neo-platonists
follow Enrique's lead, letting themselves be enchanted by the piper
at the gate of games. Some of the central questions that Enrique
deals with are: do we read for the symbol, or the image? Do we read
for the narrative that the cards create or their potential for
transformation? Do we read for the plot, the poetry, or the formal
properties? We find Enrique holding the torch and asking everybody
the same questions: how do we experience the tarot? Through
symbolic readings or through interacting with the image? While it
is clear that he goes with the latter, he gives everyone a chance
to state their preferences. But he doesn't stop there. He wants to
see what the argument is for such preferences. What are the
motivations in considering where images take us? How do the images
do that? Why do we go to fortunetellers? My own contribution to
this is to suggest that we read cards for the magic of narrative.
We go to fortunetellers to see others play with our lives. Here are
47 of them. -- CAMELIA ELIAS, "HE RECO ME: ENRIQUE ENRIQUEZ'S
POETICS OF DIVINATION"
Cultural Text Studies is a research project initiated by the
Department of Languages, Culture and Aesthetics at Aalborg
University. The present introductory volume launches a series of
themed monographs which will be edited by researchers at the Dept.,
occasionally aided by friends and associates from other programmes.
The purpose of the series is to be a forum for the publication of
results of research in the broadly defined area of cultural text.
CTS -- An Introduction is a volume authored by present and past
members of the English programme's teaching staff in the fields of
culture, literature, and media studies. The essays range widely in
terms of the period, genre, and medium of the texts investigated.
Focus areas include Victorian literature and art; high modernism,
especially approached from the point of view of a centre/margin
discourse; and finally postmodernist aesthetics and its embedded
move from literary into cultural studies, as witnessed by essays on
world music, shoes, Hollywood, the post-ironic, the
deterritorialised, and the post-human condition as cultural texts.
The epistemic creative writer is not merely an expressive writer, a
writer who writes for creative writing programs at diverse
university colleges. Rather, the epistemic creative writer is the
writer who understands that in order to say something useful you
must step out of the space that engages your ego. Awareness of what
really matters comes from the contemplation of the futility of
words. Before the word there is silence. After the word there is
silence. But during the word there is knowledge that can be made
crystal clear. This book is about extracting what writing means to
a few writers who formulate ideas about creative writing without,
however, making claims to instruction. Can creative writing that
produces knowledge be taught without a method? Samuel Beckett,
Raymond Federman, Gertrude Stein, Jacques Lacan, Frank O'Hara,
Douglas Hofstadter, Brian Rotman, Herman Melville, Kathy Acker,
Friedrich Nietzsche, David Markson, Andrei Codrescu, and a host of
others, gather here to offer an answer. -- "Camelia Elias speaks to
the reader from that place where the language of the birds becomes
the language of silence." (Patrick Blackburn, Professor of Formal
Logic, Roskilde University)
This is a book of fragments and prose poetry celebrating what
mothers try to pass on to their children: a sense of how to be
grateful for the experiences in life that can be said to be not
only beautiful but also significant in form. The author's own
mother, a logician, emerges as a powerful woman who has things to
say to people she encounters through mediation: mathematicians,
prophets, lovers, and fools. The introduction to the collection is
an informative memoir which entangles the personal essay with the
formal properties of writing that can be said to be both epistemic,
creating a certain kind of knowledge, and also creative in terms of
approaches to narrative.
Pulverizing Portraits provides the first book-length study of
contemporary American poet Lynn Emanuel. Emanuel's poetry is
significant because it situates itself in relation to current
debates about the state of poetry, creative writing in the
academia, and the importance of drawing on interdisciplinary
approaches to poetry via visual aesthe-tics, poststructuralist
literary and theoretical perspectives, and philosophy. Camelia
Elias takes a look at what characterizes contemporary American
prose poetry, namely an intensified awareness of being close to
something. Poets such as Lynn Emanuel have been increasingly
concerned with poetry as a tool for cultural criticism which
constantly redefines our poetic discourse. Elias traces the power
of Emanuel's writing and looks at her subtleties in combining
intrinsic and formal constraints in poetry with extrinsic and
socio-historical methodologies. Elias's analyses of Emanuel's
poetic genius culminate in a plethora of references which bring
together painters, philosophers, poets, critics, and actors. Thus,
the poet's father, the painter Akiba Emanuel, meets Giorgio
Agamben, Charles Simic, Gertrude Stein, and Sharon Stone. They all
contribute to voicing the world's "interminable speeches."
Celebrated American author Raymond Federman is 80 this year. The
present volume, which is a collaboration between scholars at
Aalborg and Roskilde University, marks this event in addition to
introducing Federman to the general public. As Federman has given
the editor, Camelia Elias, his permission "to use and abuse
whatever you need and want from my work including my body," she has
not hesitated to do so. The result is a fascinating read. The
volume features 4 scholarly essays and an indit encounter between
Federman and Elias, featuring both of these authors' texts. "A
warm, intelligent, and moving book." Raymond Federman
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