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Journal Article
Poetics Today (2008) 29 (2): 277–308.
Published: 01 June 2008
...George Butte To begin with, the essay identifies shortcomings in classical suture theory's approach to film's narration of consciousness. This approach, which has been widely influential in film theory, grew out of work by Jean-Pierre Oudart, Jacques-Alain Miller, Daniel Dayan, Stephen Heath...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2001) 22 (2): 263–298.
Published: 01 June 2001
.... Pratt have been studied extensively.To see the crisis of inscription in South African writing following colonization in terms of a ‘‘seam’’ is to regard the sharp point of the nib as a stitching instrument that seeks to suture the incommensurate. The Oxford English Dictionary (d ed.) defines seam...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2022) 43 (1): 79–101.
Published: 01 March 2022
.... In this ars poetica, the form of the poem is less a settled thing than a You could say that form is learning you can see form take shape at the coronal suture's first arcade it's explaining it's appearing it's unestranged from enormity's prick of a spiny plant like a rose as experimenting it's...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2003) 24 (1): 143–144.
Published: 01 March 2003
...). Moreover, one can view metalepsis itself as an emblematic reading hypothesis overarching the entire work. The dialectic between cut and suture that is so prominent in La Jetée is placed in a metaleptic con- 6828 POETICS TODAY / 24:1 / sheet 148 of 151...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2003) 24 (1): 145–146.
Published: 01 March 2003
...). Moreover, one can view metalepsis itself as an emblematic reading hypothesis overarching the entire work. The dialectic between cut and suture that is so prominent in La Jetée is placed in a metaleptic con- 6828 POETICS TODAY / 24:1 / sheet 148 of 151...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2003) 24 (1): 146–147.
Published: 01 March 2003
...). Moreover, one can view metalepsis itself as an emblematic reading hypothesis overarching the entire work. The dialectic between cut and suture that is so prominent in La Jetée is placed in a metaleptic con- 6828 POETICS TODAY / 24:1 / sheet 148 of 151...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2019) 40 (4): 749–752.
Published: 01 December 2019
... distant nor sutured, is black study (xiii). Blur is not only subject matter but also style and methodology, which may exasperate those firmly rooted in analytic modes of reasoning. But Moten is keen on inciting this exasperation, as he intends the exhaustion of relational individuality (283...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2018) 39 (2): 359–382.
Published: 01 June 2018
... of the medium of language. One might call ekphrasis a form of nesting without touching or suturing, a kind of action-at-distance between two rigorously sepa- rated sensory and semiotic tracks, one that requires completion in the mind of the reader. This is why poetry remains the most subtle, agile...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2006) 27 (3): 597–614.
Published: 01 September 2006
... nervous system (Taussig 1992: 1–10). This rupture in the representational order of the circus Sid sutures by recuperating the heroic story of ‘‘circus’’ life and the ‘‘circus’’ world and what it takes to succeed as a ‘‘circus’’ artist. By doing so, Sid recuperates the order of representation...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2008) 29 (1): 129–153.
Published: 01 March 2008
... of melancholy, historical catas- trophe and metaphysical pessimism in Sebald’s writings. The “affiliative gaze” of this second-generation German narrator allows him “to suture himself into the stories of others and construct a sense of narrative and biographical continuity as a compensation for exile...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2008) 29 (1): 103–128.
Published: 01 March 2008
... maternal photograph, that of Barthes’s mother in Cam- era Lucida, perhaps the image exemplifying the trope of maternal loss and longing and the son’s affiliative look that attempt to suture an unbridge- able distance. The necklace appears in Barthes’s discussion of a picture by James van der...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2024) 45 (1): 105–129.
Published: 01 March 2024
... point of “pure ‘Che vuoi?,’” which provokes unbearable anxiety insofar as it cannot be symbolized. Only through this enigma and the anxiety it rouses is the individual forced to “suture” oneself to the symbolic order, thus forming subjectivity. This process occurs by answering other questions...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2004) 25 (3): 437–464.
Published: 01 September 2004
... soil give off light of their own. The fire of an ember, by contrast, is not reflected; burning coal is a fire and a light-giving body.The fire of the coal is an actual fire.This lack of equivalence between the accidental and the intrinsic in the fire images is sutured over very pre- cisely by the phrase...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2001) 22 (2): 365–389.
Published: 01 June 2001
... as seeking to weld signifier to signified, a constitutive condition of all realism, one might argue. Granted. But the particular poi- gnancy of this quest to suture a lack internal to the sign is exacerbated by that specific juncture ‘‘under apartheid Writes Harry Bloom in Transvaal Episode: ‘‘Apartheid...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2007) 28 (1): 89–116.
Published: 01 March 2007
...: 27–29) has argued for the need to avoid suture—the overcoming of traumatic narrative rup- ture through the production of a seamless account—in representations of the legacy of the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Significantly, Richard argues this in the context of her critique...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2011) 32 (1): 171–201.
Published: 01 March 2011
... busily suturing mind to world. The ques- tion of what transpired in the sky structures the novel’s plot: it follows Henry throughout the day, as he (inwardly) reflects on and sifts through what he knows and feels and imagines, and (outwardly) talks to others and assimilates...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2008) 29 (3): 387–436.
Published: 01 September 2008
... novels as signs of reality, the quasi-Lacanian “real” cutting through the sutures of the “imaginary”—without the spectacles of psychoanalytic jargon, that may well be the way Roth regards it—and it may supply occa- sions for profound reflections on the realities of conflict, inequality...
Journal Article
Poetics Today (2013) 34 (1-2): 1–52.
Published: 01 June 2013
... representation,” “tends to unravel the conventional suturing of the imagetext and to expose the social structure of representation as an activity and a relationship of power/knowl- edge/desire.” So, in changing the antagonist (from the general or poetic “wordmaker” to the specific museum “wordmakers Loizeaux...