Last Year at Betty and Bob's: A Novelty
Sher Doruff
Published on November 22, 2018 by punctum books
- Pages
- 172 pages
- Languages
- English
- Dimensions
- 5⤫8 in.
- ISBN (Paperback)
- ISBN: 978-1-947447-79-0 (Paperback)
- ISBN (PDF)
- ISBN: 978-1-947447-80-6 (PDF)
- LCCN
- LCCN: 2018953766
- BISAC subject codes
- BISAC: FIC002000, FIC057000
- Thema subject codes
- THEMA: 5PT, FDV, FLP
Last Year at Betty and Bob’s: A Novelty is the first in a series of novellas emerging from a writing practice that taps the cusp of consciousness between dreaming and waking. A storyline, or genealogy, tinted a shade of RGB blue, is fashioned by thinking through the felt unthought of this between space. A fabulation, an anarchive of what passes through. Lucid dreaming of this type is rife with allusions to conceptual and material goings-on, manifesting in awkward imaginaries. The dream personas are rendered as complex character amalgams with nomadic ages, sexes, genders and phenotypes. Occurrences of lived “fact” elide with a hallucinatory real as speculation.
In* A Novelty*, Bette B, an ageing quasi-academic artist researcher, and BØB, attuned urban rodent, are palindromic variants of a generic cast of Betty’s and Bob’s. The happenstance of their meeting on the super slick POMOC (PostOffice MotionCorridor) affects a trans-special contagion. These are the facts of the matter. The matters that come to concern both B’s are more slippery and elusive.
Also in this set
This book is part of a 3-volume set. Other volumes in the set are:
Biographies
Sher Doruff, PhD, works in the visual, digital, and performance arts in a variety of capacities. For the past fourteen years her work has been situated in the expanded field of artistic research practice as an artist, writer, tutor, mentor, and supervisor. Her research practice currently explores fabulation and fictive approaches to writing in and through artistic research. She is currently head of the THIRD program at the DAS Graduate School (Amsterdam University of the Arts), mentoring and collaborating with 3rd-cycle/PhD artist researchers. She has taught and supervised artists in many European schools and universities including the Gerrit Rietveld Academy of Art and Design.
Endorsements
Brian Massumi
author of Parables for the Virtual: Movement, Affect, Sensation
Like much of the best writing on the relation between human civilization and nonhuman nature—Thoreau’s meditations in Walden, Herman Melville’s “The Encantadas,” Rachel Carson’s The Sea Around Us, the poetry of Kenneth Rexroth, Robinson Jeffers, and Jorie Graham—Solar Calendar opens up temporal vortices, through which we can consider simultaneously the contrasting frames of human, geological, and even cosmic time.…I have never read anything like Solar Calendar.…Though the scope of its concerns is vast, it is a work equally fitted to the scale of a human reader.
Usage metrics
Genres
- Fabulations
- Posthumanism
- TransQueer
Keywords
- art collective
- artistic research
- consumerism
- feminism
- fiction
- primary colors
- transhumanism
