"The poem attempts to pay careful attention to everything it encounters; it has a finer sense of detail, of outline, of structure, of color, and also of the 'movements' and the 'suggestions.' These are, I believe, not qualities gained by an eye competing (or cooperating) with mechanical devices which continue being brought to ever higher degrees of perfection. No, it is a concentration that remains aware of all dates of history.
'Attention'--permit me at this point to quote a maxim of Malebranche which occurs in Walter Benjamin's essay on Kafka: 'Attention is the natural prayer of the soul.'
...
And what, then, would the images be?
That which is perceived and to be perceived one time, one time over and over again, and only now and only here. And the poem would then be the place where all tropes and metaphors are developed ad absurdum.
Topos study?
Certainly, but in light of that which is to be studied,: in light of u-topia.
And human beings? and all living creatures?
In this light.
Such questions! Such demands!
It is time to turn back."
--from "Meridian" by Paul Celan, adapted from Jerry Glenn's translation given in Sovereignties in Question: the Poetics of Paul Celan by Jacques Derrida (NY: Fordham UP, 2005) pp. 182-3.
A loose set of blogbooks, each a series of considerations on poetry and poetics, working progressively past the concerns of the Language and post-Language poets and their devolution into aestheticisms. "Post-language" in its engagement with the extra-linguistic concerns of both Tibetan and Euro-American philosophies, it also simply posts language to work toward the form of a practice of anti-aesthetics as an answer to contemporary poetic and political theory. It is an exercise book.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Saturday, December 8, 2012
"Follow-Up" #9
From Baudrillard’s the intelligence of evil, or the lucidity pact again:
"The peculiar role of photography is
not to illustrate the event, but to constitute an event in itself. Logic would
demand that the event, the real, occur first and that the image come after to
illustrate it. This is, unfortunately, the case most of the time.
A
different sequence demands that the event should never exactly take place, that
it should remain in a sense a stranger to itself. Something of that strangeness
doubtless survives in every event, in every object, in every individual. This
is what the image must convey. And, to do so, it must also remain in a sense a
stranger to itself; must not conceive itself as a medium; must not take itself
for an image; must remain a fiction and hence echo the unaccountable fiction of
the event; must not be caught in its own trap or let itself be imprisoned in
the image-feedback." (99)
"There is a haziness about the real.
Reality
is not in focus. The bringing into focus of the world would be ‘objective
reality,’ that is to say, an adjustment to models of representation—exactly
like the focusing of the photographic lens on the object. Fortunately, the
world never comes definitively into focus in this way. "(98-99)
"We must then strip away, always
strip away, to get back to the image itself. Stripping away brings out the
essential point: namely that the image is more important than what it speaks
of, just as language is more important than what it signifies. "(98)
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