Article Number: 1386
Soft Cover, English, Thread Stitching, 224 Pages, 2008, Revolver Publishing by VVV
Anke Bangma, Deirdre M. Donoghue, Lina Issa, Katarina Zdjelar

Resonant Bodies, Voices, Memories

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“Resonant Bodies, Voices, Memories” evolves around memory, voice and the body – more specifically around instances where our habitual abilities to sense, remember, and speak are somehow disrupted or suspended. Such shifts and ruptures may occur through experiences such as living under an oppressive regime, migration, trying to make oneself understood in a foreign language, or through physical inhibitions like aphasia or stuttering.

It is exactly at moments when we struggle with memory, when language fails us or our voice breaks, when our bodies are affected by inhibitions or prohibitions, that it becomes pertinent what values we attach to memory, voice and the body, and what roles they have in shaping our subjectivity and our status as subjects.

It has become common to understand memory, voice and even bodily knowledge and sensations as something we not simply have, but something we do. But when the ability to remember, feel or speak gets disrupted, even this sense that we are engaged in doing – in interacting with and acting in the world – becomes a question. What happens to our sense of self and our relation to others when we try to relate to places where we are not, to a voice that does not seem to be our own, or to a body that we don’t seem to be in control of?

The publication “Resonant Bodies, Voices, Memories” is edited by Anke Bangma, Deirdre M. Donoghue, Lina Issa and Katarina Zdjelar, and contains texts and artist’s contributions by Ernst van Alphen, Özlem Altin, Steven Connor, Mladen Dolar, Deirdre M. Donoghue, Jeroen Fabius, Brigitte Felderer, Gunndís Yr Finnbogadóttir, Lina Issa, Suely Rolnik, Imogen Stidworthy, Jalal Toufic, and Katarina Zdjelar. Design by Johanna Bilak.

Contents

Anke Bangma: Introduction
Lina Issa: Where We Are Not: Rehearsing absence/presence of a cultural body
Jeroen Fabius: Con forts fleuve: Politics of perception in the work of Boris Charmatz
Suely Rolnik: Deleuze, schizoanalyst
Jalal Toufic: Black Holes Radiate Lovingly
Özlem Altin: Subject/Object
Deirdre M. Donoghue: The Past Is Not Simply There
Ernst van Alphen: Towards a New Historiography: Péter Forgács and the aesthetics of temporality
Gunndís Yr Finnbogadóttir: House Pieces
Steven Connor: Phonophobia: The dumb devil of stammering
Katarina Zdjelar: When Language Starts Speaking Us Brigitte Felderer: Speaking Machines
Imogen Stidworthy: The Whisper Heard
Mladen Dolar: What’s in a Voice?