Imagen del autor

Kathleen Stewart (1)

Autor de Ordinary Affects

Para otros autores llamados Kathleen Stewart, ver la página de desambiguación.

14 Obras 276 Miembros 6 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Créditos de la imagen: Courtesy of Allen and Unwin

Obras de Kathleen Stewart

Ordinary Affects (2007) 135 copias
Louis A Normal Novel (1993) 18 copias
The after life (2008) 12 copias
Nightflowers (1996) 9 copias
Men of bad character (2011) 9 copias
Spilt milk (1995) 6 copias
Victim Train (1992) 6 copias
The Red Room (1999) 6 copias
The black butterfly (2001) 3 copias
The white star (1997) 2 copias
Snow (1994) 2 copias

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female

Miembros

Reseñas

If I'd stayed in academia, I'd hope to have been able to write in the vein of Stewart.
 
Denunciada
KatrinkaV | May 14, 2023 |
This was a compelling book in that I couldn't put it down. However much the main protagonist was a complete train wreck who most of the time I wanted to strangle, the author had the skill to make the reader want to go on for the ride. And to be honest, there were moments of self recognition in the obsession and self delusion of the main character. We've all been there, I'm just not sure I want to go back there.
 
Denunciada
nautilus | Sep 20, 2017 |
http://shawjonathan.wordpress.com/2010/05/04/ordinary affects/

A couple of pages in, I decided that even though this is a scholarly work, probably belonging to the discipline of postmodern anthropology, I lack the background to be able to read it in a scholarly manner. Instead, I let it kind of break over me. I read it as if it was poetry. And I enjoyed it. I can't tell you what it's about, mind you. It abounds in anecdotes, ranging from a pleasant but odd encounter in a check-out queue to horrific violence, from bizarre plane travel incidents to odd things seen from the car. It offers fascinating reflections on public responses to big events – the OJ trials, the Columbine shootings, child care sex abuse scandals, nuclear waste disposal, 11 September 2001. It positively bristles with gnomic utterances that would make great epigraphs for poems ('The ordinary can turn on you,' or 'Dream meets nightmare in the flick of an eye') or citations in other scholarly works ('Like a live wire, the subject [which I think here means a person] channels what's going on around it in a the process of its own self-composition. Formed by the coagulation of intensities, surfaces, sensations, perceptions and expressions, it's a thing composed of encounters and the spaces and events it traverses or inhabits').

Ordinary Affects deals in something that precedes thought: 'The ordinary can happen before the mind can think.' 'Something' is a word that Stewart uses often and interestingly, usually in the phrase 'or something', as if to insist on the provisional nature of her thinking. At least part of what Stewart means by 'ordinary affect' is what happens when we pay attention, how we integrate, or not, the many influences on our perception, our emotional responses, our unreflective thoughts.

I found myself remembering the only lines I know from the US poet Muriel Rukeyser:

PAY ATTENTION TO WHAT THEY TELL YOU TO FORGET

PAY ATTENTION TO WHAT THEY TELL YOU TO FORGET

PAY ATTENTION TO WHAT THEY TELL YOU TO FORGET

(The capitals are hers.)

If I get a chance I'll re-read this book, though I expect it will be a matter of letting it break over my head again.
… (más)
1 vota
Denunciada
shawjonathan | May 4, 2010 |
a beautifully crafted and compelling memoir
 
Denunciada
frida170258 | Nov 1, 2008 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
14
Miembros
276
Popularidad
#84,078
Valoración
3.9
Reseñas
6
ISBNs
45

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