Abstract
The following paper proposes a reading of American poet Eileen Myles’ 2007 poetry collection Sorry, Tree in the interrelated contexts of Lauren Berlant’s understanding of intimacy and her concept of intimate citizenship, Lee Edelman’s understanding of sexuality and negativity, as well as Giorgio Agamben’s sense of the contemporary as always untimely. An openly lesbian and queer author, Myles gestures towards the sawed and the disempowered, olering an intimate, yet unmistakably political negotiation of a minoritarian lesbian position as both denant and transformative of the (hetero)normative status quo through acts of observation, engagement, and participation that do not necessarily have to be conspicuous or successful to elect reconceptualization of the social; rather, Myles suggests that individual agency in the public world also resides in failure as illuminative of the fact that one’s desire for presence is continuously actualized through entanglement with negativity.
Subject
General Medicine,General Medicine,General Medicine,General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science,Management Science and Operations Research,Mechanical Engineering,Energy Engineering and Power Technology,Computer Networks and Communications,Hardware and Architecture,Software,Immunology and Allergy,Applied Mathematics,General Mathematics,General Medicine,General Medicine,General Chemistry
Reference27 articles.
1. Agamben, Georgio. What Is an Apparatus? And Other Essays. Trans. David Kishik and Stefan Pedatella. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2009. Print.
2. Berlant, Lauren. The Queen of America Goes to Washington City: Essays on Sex and Citizenship. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1997. Print.
3. Berlant, Lauren, and Lee Edelman. Sex, or the Unbearable. Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2014. Print.
4. Butler, Judith. Notes Towards a Performative Theory of Assembly. Cambridge and London, Harvard University Press, 2015. Print.
5. Citizen Kane. Dir. Orson Welles. Perfs. Orson Welles, Joseph Cotton. RKO Radio Pictures, 1941. DVD.