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Orlando Reade

Orlando Reade is writing a Ph.D. on English poetry and cosmology in the seventeenth century. His interview with Lynette Yiadom-Boakye can be read in The White Review No. 13.



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Wildness of the Day

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December 2016

Orlando Reade

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December 2016

One day in late 2011, waiting outside Green Park station, my gaze was drawn to an unexpected sight. Earlier that year a canopy of...

Interview

Issue No. 13

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye

Orlando Reade

Interview

Issue No. 13

Modern philosophy is threatened by love, whose objects are never only objects. Philosophers have discovered in love a lived...

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

Orlando Reade

Contributor

August 2014

Orlando Reade is writing a Ph.D. on English poetry and cosmology in the seventeenth century. His interview with Lynette...

Life outside the Manet Paradise Resort : On the paintings of Lynette Yiadom-Boakye

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November 2012

Orlando Reade

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November 2012

*   A person is represented, sitting in what appears to be the banal and conventional pose of a high street studio portrait photographer:...

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Interview

February 2016

Interview with Gerard Byrne

Izabella Scott

Interview

February 2016

I first encountered Gerard Byrne’s eerily dislocated films at Tate Britain, where 1984 and Beyond (2005–7) was shown on...

Interview

March 2014

Interview with Antón Arrufat

TR. Jennie Rothwell

J. S. Tennant

Interview

March 2014

Author of the novels La noche del aguafiestas and the experimental Ejercicios para hacer de la esterilidad virtud, Antón...

Interview

May 2013

Interview with Darian Leader

Kishani Widyaratna

Interview

May 2013

A practicing Lacanian psychoanalyst, Darian Leader is one of a dying breed. It is no overstatement to say that...

 

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