Description
| Author/Contributor(s): | Gabbert, Elisa |
| Publisher: | Black Ocean |
| Date: | 11/12/2013 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
Literary Nonfiction. Elisa Gabbert’s THE SELF UNSTABLE combines elements of memoir, philosophy, and aphorism to explore and trouble our ideas of the self, memory, happiness, aesthetics, love, and sex. With a sense of humor and an ability to find glimmers of the absurd in the profound, she uses the lyric essay like a koan to provoke the reader’s reflection–unsettling the role of truth and interrogating the I in both literary and daily life: The future isn’t anywhere, so we can never get there. We can only disappear.
Gabbert strikes a perfect balance between heart and head, between cleverness and earnestness, between language that demonstrates its own fallibility and language that is surprisingly, perfectly precise.–Make Magazine
… smart and philosophically dexterous, capable of showing the self to be a fetish-object of its own and also a refractive subject of Lacanian devotion, as a mirror which doesn’t so much distort as endlessly `reveal, ‘ like the panopticon eye of a camera.–The Rumpus
… the dispassion about the self allows the writer to enact a number of equally lovely sleights of hand . . . Even while the author is drawn to image and reason, she is also in love with the vanishing point, where all perspective is ecstatically compressed into a single node.–Gently Read Literature





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