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"Sergio Chejfec is an admirable writer." —Patti Smith “Could
anyone possibly believe that writing doesn’t exist? It would be
like denying the existence of rain.” The perfect green notebook
forms the basis for Sergio Chejfec’s work, collecting writing,
and allowing it to exist in a state of permanent possibility, or,
as he says, “The written word is also capable of waiting for the
next opportunity to appear and to continue to reveal itself by and
for itself.” This same notebook is also the jumping off
point for this essay, which considers the dimensions of the act of
writing (legibility, annotation, facsimile, inscription, typewriter
versus word processor versus pen) as a way of thinking, as a record
of relative degrees of permanence, and as a performance. From Kafka
through Borges, Nabokov, Levrero, Walser, the implications of how
we write take on meaning as well worth considering as what we
write. This is a love letter to the act of writing as practice,
bearing down on all the ways it happens (cleaning typewriter keys,
the inevitable drying out of the bottle of wite-out, the difference
between Word Perfect and Word) to open up all the ways in which
“when we express our thought, it changes.”
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Azusa (Hardcover)
Jeffrey Lawrence Cornejo
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R781
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Anxieties of Experience: The Literatures of the Americas from
Whitman to Bolano offers a new interpretation of US and Latin
American literature from the nineteenth century to the present.
Revisiting longstanding debates in the hemisphere about whether the
source of authority for New World literature derives from an
author's first-hand contact with American places and peoples or
from a creative (mis)reading of existing traditions, the book
charts a widening gap in how modern US and Latin American writers
defined their literary authority. In the process, it traces the
development of two distinct literary strains in the Americas: the
"US literature of experience" and the "Latin American literature of
the reader." Reinterpreting a range of canonical works from Walt
Whitman's Leaves of Grass to Roberto Bolano's 2666, Anxieties of
Experience shows how this hemispheric literary divide fueled a
series of anxieties, misunderstandings, and "misencounters" between
US and Latin American authors. In the wake of recent calls to
rethink the "common grounds" approach to literature across the
Americas, Jeffrey Lawrence advocates a comparative approach that
highlights the distinct logics of production and legitimation in
the US and Latin American literary fields. Anxieties of Experience
closes by exploring the convergence of the literature of experience
and the literature of the reader in the first decades of the
twenty-first century, arguing that the post-Bolano moment has
produced the strongest signs of a truly reciprocal literature of
the Americas in more than a hundred years.
Anxieties of Experience: The Literatures of the Americas from
Whitman to Bolano offers a new interpretation of US and Latin
American literature from the nineteenth century to the present.
Revisiting longstanding debates in the hemisphere about whether the
source of authority for New World literature derives from an
author's first-hand contact with American places and peoples or
from a creative (mis)reading of existing traditions, the book
charts a widening gap in how modern US and Latin American writers
defined their literary authority. In the process, it traces the
development of two distinct literary strains in the Americas: the
"US literature of experience" and the "Latin American literature of
the reader." Reinterpreting a range of canonical works from Walt
Whitman's Leaves of Grass to Roberto Bolano's 2666, Anxieties of
Experience shows how this hemispheric literary divide fueled a
series of anxieties, misunderstandings, and "misencounters" between
US and Latin American authors. In the wake of recent calls to
rethink the "common grounds" approach to literature across the
Americas, the book advocates a comparative approach that highlights
the distinct logics of production and legitimation in the US and
Latin American literary fields. Anxieties of Experience closes by
exploring the convergence of the literature of experience and the
literature of the reader in the first decades of the twenty-first
century, arguing that the post-Bolano moment has produced the
strongest signs of a truly reciprocal literature of the Americas in
more than a hundred years.
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