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Kate Zambreno
Kate Zambreno is the author most recently of Drifts (Riverhead) and To Write As If Already Dead, a study of Hervé Guibert (Columbia University Press). Forthcoming in Summer 2023 from Riverhead is The Light Room, a meditation on art and care, as well as Tone, a collaboration with Sofia Samatar, from Columbia University Press in early 2024. ‘Insekt’ is part of an in-progress work of fiction, Realisms. She is a 2021 Guggenheim Fellow.

Articles Available Online


Insekt or large verminous thing

Fiction

September 2022

Kate Zambreno

Fiction

September 2022

Around dusk one evening in March, I went out back to the small garage, and switched on my small square of artificial light at...

Feature

January 2018

Accumulations (Appendix F)

Kate Zambreno

Feature

January 2018

I’ve been keeping a mental list of all the pieces of art that I’ve nursed Leo in front of...

In his book Ways of Seeing, John Berger wrote, ‘Each evening we see the sun set We know that the earth is turning away from it Yet the knowledge, the explanation, never quite fits the sight’ The evidence of our own eyes jars with physical proofs, and we must rely on language to bridge the gap But before we are taught the explanation, the sight of the sun setting over the spinning world exists in a zone of slippage, where seeing something and knowing it to be true are different things   This is the best figure I have to describe the kind of world in which an English medieval dream poem takes place They are wonderful and strange environments, where what we read is not always easy or possible to visualise, and besides, everything means something else   Piers Plowman, the 14th-century multi-dream epic, is particularly difficult to follow It’s written in a tricky dialect of Middle English, and its unknown author tends to yank his ‘camera’ around wildly The poem begins with its narrator falling asleep in the Malvern Hills (he ‘slombred into a slepyng’), before his dream begins To the east, he sees a huge tower rising up to the sun, with a dungeon and deep ditches beneath it But then he sees something more: ‘A fair feeld ful of folk fond I ther bitwene / Of alle manere of men, the meene and the riche’ (‘I found a fair field full of folk, there in between / Of all manner of men, the mean and the rich’) The ‘eye’ of the poem wanders, zooming in and out, from the sun to a huge tower to a close-up of an individual man using a plough to till the earth If it were a movie, the reader would be seasick   Instability, shameless inconsistency, subtle paradox, resistance to visualisation: these are very medieval literary flavours The instability principle applies to medieval poetry but also, vector-like, to the way texts vary from manuscript to manuscript The scholar Paul Zumthor called it mouvance, the way that medieval texts – especially those that

Contributor

August 2014

Kate Zambreno

Contributor

August 2014

Kate Zambreno is the author most recently of Drifts (Riverhead) and To Write As If Already Dead, a study...

Heroines

feature

March 2013

Kate Zambreno

feature

March 2013

I am beginning to realise that taking the self out of our essays is a form of repression. Taking the self out feels like...

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fiction

January 2016

Forgetting: Chang'e Descends to Earth, or Chang'e Escapes to the Moon

Li Er

TR. Annelise Finegan Wasmoen

fiction

January 2016

Source Material   Her story is widely known. At first she stayed in heaven, then she followed a man...

feature

November 2011

The nobility of confusion: occupying the imagination

Drew Lyness

feature

November 2011

The Oakland Police Officers Association in California said something clever recently: ‘As your police officers, we are confused.’ It...

poetry

February 2012

Giant Impact Hypothesis

James Midgley

poetry

February 2012

I bought a satellite’s eye from the market. To look through it involved the whole god-orbit, a cotton-wooled Faberge...

 

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