This was so thought-provoking. It's a memoir about the consequences of a terrible bicycle accident and covers both the author's life and ideas about the body and identity.
This was so thought-provoking. It's a memoir about the consequences of a terrible bicycle accident and covers both the author's life and ideas about the body and identity.
"There are 108 single-word prepositions in the English language, and none is adequate to representing the relation of mind to body."
I started this book about dealing with the aftermath of a horrible bicycle crash ... and then the next day my husband crashed his bike. I'm mildly freaked out. But I'm going to keep reading. (And my husband is fine.)
Just not compelling. Poorly written and disjointed. Laden with unexamined privilege
"We speak of being /in/ a body, as though the self were somehow contained in a bodily exterior. Conversely, we understand the body as materiality held within an encompassing self-consciousness.. Inside and outside run into each other, as when you run your finger along the side of a Möbius strip."
"... The tropes of pain display the awkwardness of catachresis."
From Maggie Nelson's mentor. Ready to be upended.
I am not someone who needs more than a Maggie Nelson recommendation and this is the book she keeps talking about lately.