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The Bodies That Remain

  • Edited by Emmy Beber

Published on October 16, 2018 by punctum books

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Pages
306 pages
Languages
English
Dimensions
5⤫8 in.
ISBN (Paperback)
ISBN: 978-1-947447-67-7 (Paperback)
ISBN (PDF)
ISBN: 978-1-947447-68-4 (PDF)
LCCN
LCCN: 2018946359
BISAC subject codes
BISAC: LIT000000
Thema subject codes
THEMA: DSC, DSK, FXL

The Bodies That Remain is a collection of bodies and absences.

Through biography, experimental essay, interview, fictional manifestation, and poetic extraction, The Bodies That Remain is a collection of texts and images on the bodies of artists and writers who battled with the frustration of their own physicality and whose work reckoned with these limitations and continued beyond them.

The essays in* The Bodies That Remain* look back at how the identities of these bodies were shaped by the spaces around them, through the retelling of memory, through stories told by others, of how their work, processed by their body, made it possible for others to experience sensations – mourning, desire, or a nostalgia that could not belong to another, to another’s body – and in capturing this ability, their work confirms the body’s urgency.

Amongst others, The Bodies That Remain tells the story of Emily Dickinson’s decay, the missing grave of Valeska Gert, the voice and sound of the body of Judee Sill, and the derailed body (and work) of Jane Bowles. It questions the absent body but broken organs of JT Leroy as they find themselves scattered across texts, and also interrogates the loss of distinction of illness for Jules de Goncourt as syphilis riddled his nervous system. It retrieves the illusory body of Kathy Acker through dream and through horror, sees the morphing body of Michael Jackson in becoming all of the bodies he was asked to be, and looks toward Sylvia Plath and the language of her own body.

Where ‘body’ as a verb makes material something abstract, The Bodies That Remain, as a collection, became bodily.

Contents

  1. Frontmatter (i–xvi)

    Emmy Beber

  2. Introduction (17–21)

    Emmy Beber

  3. The Life and Deaths of Jane Bowles (or, Reputation) (23–30)

    Lynne Tillman

  4. Be Michael Jackson (32–36)

    David Rule

  5. Judee Sill (37–42)

    Mairead Case

  6. Lads of Aran (43–52)

    Claire Potter

  7. Emily Dickinson (53–61)

    Jeremy Millar

  8. Pause Between Pauses (62–75)

    Chloé Griffin

  9. Brigid Brophy (77–88)

    Phoebe Blatton

  10. A Body. Beat. (90–94)

    Susanna Davies-Crook

  11. the Language of the Toilet (95–108)

    Travis Jeppesen

  12. Mary Butts (110–112)

    Karen Di Franco

  13. Mnemesoid (113–124)

    Tai Shani

  14. He Dives Too Deep (125–133)

    Philip Hoare

  15. more flinching (135–213)

    Heather Phillipson

  16. The Remaining Body of a Gage Fanfic (215–223)

    Uma Breakdown

  17. Kathy's Body (225–228)

    Linda Stupard

  18. Envois (230–242)

    Sharon Kivland

  19. Wilhelm Reich (243–250)

    Harman Bains

  20. The Missing Body of JT Leroy (251–262)

    Pil and Galia Kollectiv

  21. more or less matter (263–268)

    Kevin Breathnach

  22. Sylvia Plath (269–297)

    Emily LaBarge

  23. Backmatter (299–305)

    Emmy Beber

Biographies

  • Emmy Beber

    (Editor)

    Royal College of Art

    Emmy Beber is a writer, editor and teacher in London. She performs as part of the collective and band WE with Pil and Galia Kollectiv and Victor Jakeman. She has a BA in History of Art, an MA in Critical Writing in Art and Design and a PGCE, specialising in music education.

Endorsements

Brian Dillon

Royal College of Art

Among the wonders of The Bodies That Remain is the fact nobody has thought to do precisely this before: a book about the ways past writers’ and artists’ bodies insist, persist, and haunt us in the present. Under Emmy Beber’s engaged and vigilant editorship, The Bodies That Remain addresses itself to the nature of biography, relations between creativity and incarnation, desire and its discontents, illness as metaphor and emphatically not metaphor. There are bodies that felt and feel too present, those that vanish or turn out never to have been, others that assert themselves or doubt themselves in the work they have made.

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Genres

  • Literary Studies

Keywords

  • embodiment
  • metempsychosis
  • mortality
  • mourning
  • posthumous literature