0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R250 - R500 (2)
  • R500 - R1,000 (1)
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments

We Defy Augury (Hardcover): Hélène Cixous We Defy Augury (Hardcover)
Hélène Cixous; Translated by Beverley Bie Brahic
R546 Discovery Miles 5 460 Ships in 9 - 15 working days

We defy augury. There’s a special providence in the fall of a sparrow. If it be now, ’tis not to come … the readiness is all. Under the sign of Hamlet’s last act, Hélène Cixous, in her eightieth year, launched her new book—and the latest chapter in her Human Comedy, her Search for Lost Time. Surely one of the most delightful, in its exposure of the seams of her extraordinary craft, We Defy Augury finds the reader among familiar faces. In these pages we encounter Eve, the indomitable mother; Jacques Derrida, the faithful friend; children, neighbors; and always the literary forebears: Montaigne, Diderot, Proust, and, in one moving passage, Erich Maria Remarque. We Defy Augury moves easily from Cixous’s Algerian childhood, to Bacharach in the Rhineland, to, eerily, the Windows on the World restaurant atop the World Trade Center, in the year 2000. In one of the most astonishing passages in this tour-de-force performance of the art of digression, Cixous proclaims: “My books are free in their movements and in their choice of routes […] They are the product of many makers, dreamed, dictated, cobbled together.” This unique experience, which could only have come from the pen of Cixous, is now available in English, and readers are sure to delight in this latest work by one of France’s most celebrated writer-philosophers.  

Manhattan - Letters from Prehistory (Paperback): Hélène Cixous Manhattan - Letters from Prehistory (Paperback)
Hélène Cixous; Translated by Beverley Bie Brahic
R439 R367 Discovery Miles 3 670 Save R72 (16%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Manhattan is the tale of a young French scholar who travels to the United States in 1965 on a Fulbright Fellowship to consult the manuscripts of beloved authors. In Yale University’s Beinecke Library, tantalized by the conversational and epistolary brilliance of a fellow researcher, she is lured into a picaresque and tragic adventure. Meanwhile, back in France, her children and no-nonsense mother await her return. A young European intellectual’s first contact with America and the city of New York are the background of this story. The experience of Manhattan haunts this labyrinth of a book as, over a period of thirty-five years, its narrator visits and revisits Central Park and a half-buried squirrel, the Statue of Liberty and a never again to be found hotel in the vicinity of Morningside Heights: a journey into memory in which everything is never the same. Traveling from library to library, France to the United States, Shakespeare to Kafka to Joyce, Manhattan deploys with gusto all the techniques for which Cixous’s fiction and essays are known: rapid juxtapositions of time and place, narrative and description, analysis and philosophical reflection. It investigates subjects Cixous has spent her life probing: reading, writing, and the “omnipotence-other” seductions of literature; a family’s flight from Nazi Germany and postcolonial Algeria; childhood, motherhood, and, not least, the strange experience of falling in love with a counterfeit genius.

Osnabrück Station to Jerusalem (Paperback): Hélène Cixous Osnabrück Station to Jerusalem (Paperback)
Hélène Cixous; Translated by Peggy Kamuf; Foreword by Eva Hoffman
R513 R419 Discovery Miles 4 190 Save R94 (18%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days

An inventive literary account of Cixous’s remarkable journey to her mother’s birthplace Winner, French Voices Award for Excellence in Publication and Translation For about eighty years, the Jonas family of Osnabrück were part of a small but vibrant Jewish community in this mid-size city of Lower Saxony. After the war, Osnabrück counted not a single Jew. Most had been deported and murdered in the camps, others emigrated if they could and if they managed to overcome their own inertia. It is this inertia and failure to escape that Hélène Cixous seeks to account for in Osnabrück Station to Jerusalem. Vicious anti-Semitism hounded all of Osnabrück’s Jews long before the Nazis’ rise to power in 1933. So why did people wait to leave when the threat was so patent, so in-their-face? Drawn from the stories told to Cixous by her mother, Ève, and grandmother, Rosalie (Rosi), this literary work reimagines fragments of Ève’s and Rosi’s stories, including the death of Ève’s uncle, Onkel André. Piecing together the story of Andreas Jonas from what she was told and from what she envisages, Cixous recounts the tragedy of the one she calls the King Lear of Osnabrück, who followed his daughter to Jerusalem only to be sent away by her and to return to Osnabrück in time to be deported to a death camp. Cixous wanders the streets of the city she had heard about all her life in her mother’s and grandmother’s stories, digs into its archives, meets city officials, all the while wondering if she should have come. These hesitations and reflections in the present, often voiced in dialogues staged with her own son or daughter, are woven with scenes from her childhood in Algeria and the half-remembered, half-invented stories of the Jonas family, making Osnabrück Station to Jerusalem one of the author’s most intensely engaging books. This work received the French Voices Award for excellence in publication and translation. French Voices is a program created and funded by the French Embassy in the United States and FACE (French American Cultural Exchange).

Camille Henrot: Mother Tongue: Julika Bosch, Hélène Cixous, Seamus Kealy, Emily LaBarge, Legacy Russell, Marcus Steinweg Camille Henrot: Mother Tongue
Julika Bosch, Hélène Cixous, Seamus Kealy, Emily LaBarge, Legacy Russell, …
R1,257 Discovery Miles 12 570 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

“IN MANY LANGUAGES, ‘UNDERSTANDING’ ALSO COMES FROM THE IDEA OF PUTTING SOMETHING INSIDE YOUR BODY” – CAMILLE HENROT Over the past twenty years, Camille Henrot has developed a critically acclaimed practice that moves seamlessly between drawing, painting, sculpture, installation, and film. Mother Tongue is Henrot’s first publication focused solely on painting and drawing, bringing together over 200 works from the series System of Attachment, Wet Job, and Soon, created between 2018 and 2022. This recent body of work addresses the ambivalent nature of care and the tension between the simultaneous developmental need for attachment and independence, beginning at infancy and continuing throughout life. Her deeply personal and intimate interrogations ultimately relate to broader questions such as the expectations placed on mothers and the representation of the female body. This richly illustrated catalogue is accompanied by texts from Emily LaBarge, Legacy Russell, Marcus Steinweg, Hélene Cixous, Seamus Kealy, and a conversation with Camille Henrot and curator Julika Bosch.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Hart Easy Pour Kettle (2.5L)
 (2)
R199 R179 Discovery Miles 1 790
Multi Colour Jungle Stripe Neckerchief
R119 Discovery Miles 1 190
Tipping Point: Turmoil Or Reform…
Raymond Parsons Paperback R300 R215 Discovery Miles 2 150
Bug-A-Salt 3.0 Black Fly
 (1)
R999 Discovery Miles 9 990
Casio LW-200-7AV Watch with 10-Year…
R999 R884 Discovery Miles 8 840
Inside The Belly Of The Beast - The Real…
Angelo Agrizzi Paperback  (1)
R277 Discovery Miles 2 770
Loot
Nadine Gordimer Paperback  (2)
R398 R330 Discovery Miles 3 300
Aerolatte Cappuccino Art Stencils (Set…
R110 R95 Discovery Miles 950
Dromex 3-Ply Medical Mask (Box of 50)
 (17)
R1,099 R399 Discovery Miles 3 990
Alcolin Mounting Tape 40 Square Pads…
R41 Discovery Miles 410

 

Partners