Jeffrey Sacks: Poeticality, Gebunden
Poeticality
- In Refusal of Settler Life
- Publisher:
- Fordham University Press, 02/2026
- Binding:
- Gebunden
- Language:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9781531512323
- Item number:
- 12253275
- Volume:
- 336 Pages
- Weight:
- 739 g
- Format:
- 229 x 152 mm
- Thickness:
- 25 mm
- Release date:
- 3.2.2026
- Note
-
Caution: Product is not in German language
Other releases of Poeticality |
Price |
|---|---|
| Buch, Kartoniert / Broschiert, Englisch | EUR 44.84* |
Blurb
"Will you not memorize a little poetry to halt the slaughter?" the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish wrote. Darwish's poetic statement points to world-evacuating and genocidal violences -- in a triangulation of Palestine, Iraq, and the American settler state -- as his language recalls us to a sonority in utterance and acts of refusal in collective form. Through readings of Arabic and Arab poetry, art, translation, and philosophy, Jeffrey Sacks illumines an indetermined, non-accumulative, non-propertied manner of lingual doing -- across post-Ottoman topographies and states, and in excess of any single language -- where language is a practice in sociality, the social is indistinct from the ontological, and being is a poetic mode -- what this book calls "poeticality."
Poeticality studies the Lebanese-American poet and painter Etel Adnan, the Iraqi poet and translator Khālid al-Maʿālī, philosophers in the Arabic peripatetic tradition, and writings of Karl Marx, Paul Celan, Walter Benjamin, and others, to demonstrate a sense of form wholly other than what is advanced in self-determined social existence, linguistic self-understanding, and philosophical self-representation -- a manner of address and a social pose, which Sacks summarizes under the heading "settler life."
Settler life -- a form of life, a practice of reading, and an asymmetric distribution of social destruction -- asserts itself as a generalized and regulating attack upon Black and Indigenous life, and upon all forms of non-white, non-Christian, non-heteronormative existence. "Everything is in the language we use," the Oglala Lakota poet Layli Long Soldier has written. This book -- learning from Long Soldier's observation and with Darwish's sense of the poetic -- affirms the demand for Indigenous sovereignty, in Palestine, in Turtle Island, and elsewhere, a demand which, through the collective acts occasioned in it, decomposes and deposes all sovereign forms and all stately legalities, in refusal of settler life.