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Catriona Strang expertly “fabricates her own reality” in poems that explore the female condition and respond to Marcel Proust’s In Search of Lost Time. In a powerful and rare display of poetic ingenuity, Strang situates classical themes of existentialism, memory, time, and the role of women in two clarifying contexts: the metaphorical mailbox of Proust and the speaker’s own body, as understood in geographical and geological terms.
we need
not gulf
doubt
nor gist-pierce
our place
whatever grip
or drib
we might
or mean
Dear Proust, / You’ve been dawning on me. Gradually, by the charm of all your explanations, our lives have come to be constituted through art. We have made several realities, far beyond the reach of terrible conservative eyes, which grow greater, or are illuminated. Consequence really lives thus, I mean all the time.
“In Catriona Strang’s poetry, the domestic sphere is comfortably private (spherically shaped) only because a globalized technological continuum of warfare and manufacture makes it so. Corked multiplies such contradictions. First-person pronouns are plural to their rhetorical core. Memory’s a possession to be rid of. Captain Picard, you and your Château Picard are put on notice: To explore the continuum, Corked turns domestic space into a foreign planetary body, and language into a Curiosity rover. Corked touches down through vast internal distances to find a spring of our condition – as seen from here, ‘the Strang terrain’ – in Marcel Proust. The super-fine instrumentation of these poems sends back big data on the intonational and rhythmical contours of intimacy undertaking to live in a continuous (relentless) present tense. Live it.”
– Louis Cabri
“… a miraculous book that is a poetic, political and affective constellation that recalibrates how a poem might work today as a representation of a moment that is both precarious and self-assured, contradictory and confident..” – Jeff Derksen
“One may be compelled by Corked toward non-meanings, but not toward whatever-meanings. Meaning in this work results from an accumulation: of repititions, of contradictions, contraints, and intrusions, as in Proust. But there is no ambiguity.”
– Capilano Review
“The title piece, by contrast, juxtaposes letters to Marcel Proust with ”tempered fragment’—individual poems with jags and glitches that represent ‘shaky transitory moments external to capital’s seemingly omnipotent pulse.’ While these poems inevitably engage the Proustian theme of memory’s precariousness, they work hardest to advocate for the ‘unprofitable’ and ‘unproductive’ work of domestic life—’the weight women carry daily.’– Canadian Literature
“One may be compelled by ‘Corked ‘ toward non-meanings, but not toward whatever-meanings. Meaning in this work results from an accumulation: of repititions, of contradictions, contraints, and intrusions, as in Proust. But there is no ambiguity.”
– Capilano Review
96 Pages
9in * 229mm * 6in * 152mm * 0.3125in8mm
142gr
5.125oz
April 15, 2013
Vancouver
CA
9780889228528
eng
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