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Cutting the Stems - Virginie Lalucq - Bog

Bag om Cutting the Stems

Translated from the French, Cutting the Stems is a playful, long poem in sections that contains a pastiche of various unlikely influences: manuals on gardening and plant propagation, etymological dictionaries, gemstone and mineral guides, a how-to for florists, and other "un-poetic" texts. Lalucq's poem incorporates word play, linguistic borrowings, and etymological references, and McQuerry and Bourhis's translation captures, and, at times, reinvents, that word play for an English audience. The poem includes the central personas she and he who at times talk past each other in lyrical and often surrealist exchanges. Through these personas, we see gender category, like language, as fluid. She, whose identity merges with the poem's speaker, is a florist and devotes much attention to the tending of words, to "[her] sentence," which takes on a life of its own. Cutting the stems of plants becomes akin to cutting away at language so that "the sentences bloom". Lalucq's poetry invites a questioning of poetic convention, foregrounding language's gaps and slippages. In this dual language flip book, the attention to language's instability is all the richer.

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  • Sprog:
  • Engelsk
  • ISBN:
  • 9781947817586
  • Indbinding:
  • Paperback
  • Sideantal:
  • 150
  • Udgivet:
  • 15. oktober 2023
  • Størrelse:
  • 140x9x191 mm.
  • Vægt:
  • 186 g.
  • 8-11 hverdage.
  • 28. november 2024
På lager

Normalpris

  • BLACK NOVEMBER

Medlemspris

Prøv i 30 dage for 45 kr.
Herefter fra 79 kr./md. Ingen binding.

Beskrivelse af Cutting the Stems

Translated from the French, Cutting the Stems is a playful, long poem in sections that contains a pastiche of various unlikely influences: manuals on gardening and plant propagation, etymological dictionaries, gemstone and mineral guides, a how-to for florists, and other "un-poetic" texts. Lalucq's poem incorporates word play, linguistic borrowings, and etymological references, and McQuerry and Bourhis's translation captures, and, at times, reinvents, that word play for an English audience. The poem includes the central personas she and he who at times talk past each other in lyrical and often surrealist exchanges. Through these personas, we see gender category, like language, as fluid. She, whose identity merges with the poem's speaker, is a florist and devotes much attention to the tending of words, to "[her] sentence," which takes on a life of its own. Cutting the stems of plants becomes akin to cutting away at language so that "the sentences bloom". Lalucq's poetry invites a questioning of poetic convention, foregrounding language's gaps and slippages. In this dual language flip book, the attention to language's instability is all the richer.

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