Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city

In her second book Ring of Fire, American poet Lisa Jarnot offers the reader a dynamic sixteen-poem sequence entitled Heliopolis. Jarnot’s Heliopolis uses the legendary City of the Sun as a starting point, but rather than describe or depict the life of antiquity, Jarnot considers the city as an ongo...

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Main Author: Mark Tardi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Philology, University of Bialystok 2020-03-01
Series:Crossroads
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.filologia.uwb.edu.pl/index.php/c/article/view/549
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spelling doaj-3f4918f019984e1b8b544c1667fa491c2021-07-26T08:03:01ZengFaculty of Philology, University of BialystokCrossroads2300-62502020-03-0128789210.15290/cr.2020.28.1.06549Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary cityMark Tardi0University of Lodz, PolandIn her second book Ring of Fire, American poet Lisa Jarnot offers the reader a dynamic sixteen-poem sequence entitled Heliopolis. Jarnot’s Heliopolis uses the legendary City of the Sun as a starting point, but rather than describe or depict the life of antiquity, Jarnot considers the city as an ongoing posthuman vortex where animals perform a range of implausibly or absurdly anthropomorphic actions. Moreover, Jarnot’s recursive poetic structures both heighten the rhythmic and ludic qualities of the actions described while toggling between poignant humor and ethical confrontation. This essay seeks to examine what the social and ethical implications are in Jarnot’s reimagining of this legendary city. Moreover, the work of Cary Wolfe, Donna Haraway, and others within posthumanist discourse will be considered as a critical lens into how Jarnot is leveraging playfulness and anthropomorphism. Why does Jarnot consistently (re-)present non-human animals in her poems? How do her stylistic gestures collapse distinctions between physical and temporal boundaries?https://czasopisma.filologia.uwb.edu.pl/index.php/c/article/view/549heliopolisamerican poetryposthumanismanimalsexperimental poetry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Tardi
spellingShingle Mark Tardi
Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
Crossroads
heliopolis
american poetry
posthumanism
animals
experimental poetry
author_facet Mark Tardi
author_sort Mark Tardi
title Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
title_short Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
title_full Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
title_fullStr Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
title_full_unstemmed Heliopolis: Lisa Jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
title_sort heliopolis: lisa jarnot’s rewriting of a legendary city
publisher Faculty of Philology, University of Bialystok
series Crossroads
issn 2300-6250
publishDate 2020-03-01
description In her second book Ring of Fire, American poet Lisa Jarnot offers the reader a dynamic sixteen-poem sequence entitled Heliopolis. Jarnot’s Heliopolis uses the legendary City of the Sun as a starting point, but rather than describe or depict the life of antiquity, Jarnot considers the city as an ongoing posthuman vortex where animals perform a range of implausibly or absurdly anthropomorphic actions. Moreover, Jarnot’s recursive poetic structures both heighten the rhythmic and ludic qualities of the actions described while toggling between poignant humor and ethical confrontation. This essay seeks to examine what the social and ethical implications are in Jarnot’s reimagining of this legendary city. Moreover, the work of Cary Wolfe, Donna Haraway, and others within posthumanist discourse will be considered as a critical lens into how Jarnot is leveraging playfulness and anthropomorphism. Why does Jarnot consistently (re-)present non-human animals in her poems? How do her stylistic gestures collapse distinctions between physical and temporal boundaries?
topic heliopolis
american poetry
posthumanism
animals
experimental poetry
url https://czasopisma.filologia.uwb.edu.pl/index.php/c/article/view/549
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