Way a Line Hallucinates Its Own Linearity

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American
Author_Danielle Vogel
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Category1=Non-Fiction
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Contemporary Poetry
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Epistolary
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Experimental
Experimental Poet
Feminism
gorgeous
heartbreaking
Hypnosis
language
Language_English
Lesbian
Linearity
Long Island Sound
Lyric Essay
Memoir
Memory
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Phenomenology
Poetic Fragment
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Prose Poem
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softlaunch
Textile
Trauma
Triptych
Visual
Weaving
Women Poets

Product details

  • ISBN 9781597098212
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Aug 2020
  • Publisher: Red Hen Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Danielle Vogel’s newest collection creates a latticework for repair—the repairing of past trauma, the calling-into-presence of a dissociated self—but does so while keeping the material of this net of thinking in a fragmented, diaphanous state, glowing in the space between the poem and essay. Across three sections of “displacements,” “miniatures,” and “volume,” Vogel initiates readers into the séance of the book; she asks the reader to hold vigil for the most crucial phase of its composition, which can only happen when the reader and she meet at the site of the page, within a “new, interrupted unity.” In The Way a Line Hallucinates its Own Linearity, accord—writing with, reading with—is always a verb, always kinetic, alchemical, and alive. “It only takes one letter on the page,” Vogel writes, “and we are already inside one another’s lungs.” To consent to walk through these spaces is to give up that part of you that wishes to remain anonymous and un-entrained. You will be grateful that you did.

Danielle Vogel is a poet, lyric essayist and installation artist whose work explores the bonds between language and presence, between a reader and a writer, and how a book—as an extended architecture of a body—might serve as a site of radical transformation. She is the author of Edges & Fray (Wesleyan, 2020) and Between Grammars (Noemi, 2015). Her installations, or “public ceremonies for language,” have been most recently exhibited at RISD Museum, MICA, The University of Arizona’s Poetry Center, and Abecedarian Gallery. She teaches at Wesleyan University and makes her home in New England with the artist Renee Gladman.

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