Vollmann (was: Re: PoMo Studies Hoax (gets taken seriously))
Becky Lindroos
bekah0176 at sbcglobal.net
Wed Oct 10 10:21:55 CDT 2018
That’s one I wouldn’t mind reading a bit, but I’d really like to get through the Seven Dreams series first and the No Immediate Danger books have caught my eye. I can’t even read as fast as that man can write. (sigh)
Becky
https://beckylindroos.wordpress.com
> On Oct 10, 2018, at 1:48 AM, Kai Frederik Lorentzen <lorentzen at hotmail.de> wrote:
>
>
> I'm reading "Poor People" (in the translation - "Arme Leute" - of Robin Detje, Berlin 2018: edition suhrkamp) & enjoying it a lot. Vollmann is, in my humble opinion, best when he's working based on primary experiences of his own. Unlike Pynchon, he's not so good with secondary sources, at least I was not convinced by "Europe Central" at all. But where he goes into the field - like in "The Rainbow Stories", "The Royal Family" or, case in question, "Poor People" - he's developing the particular sensitivity Hubert Fichte, a German writer with a similar approach, called the "ethnopoetic" style. It's better than social science, --- it's true in a human respectively existential sense.
>
> > The genius of Poor People is how Vollmann demonstrates the arbitrariness of the line we draw between “self” and “other.” <
>
> http://quarterlyconversation.com/poor-people-by-william-t-vollmann-review
> --------------------------------------------------------
> https://www.hkw.de/en/programm/projekte/2017/hubert_fichte/hubert_fichte_start.php
>
> Am 08.10.2018 um 17:43 schrieb Becky Lindroos:
>> finally reading Wm Vollmann’s “The Ice Shirt” - sigh - loving it -
>>
>>
>
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