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7: Memoir/Anti-Memoir
Guest Editor's Notes
Let us not forget, says Jabes, that if we
say "I," we already say different.
--Rosmarie Waldrop, "Lavish Absence: Reading and Recalling
Edmond Jabes"
I am not I; pity the tale of me.
--Sir Philip Sidney, "Astrophil and Stella"
[W]hat I was really trying to do was re-center
the self because I was tired of hearing about the de-centered
self. And when you hear a phrase too many times, if you're
me, you think, "Ha, ha, I think I'll do the opposite."
--Alice Notley
How I grew. When I pick up a book and it is not me. The book
is a suit that fits I think another someone. I say. It is this book
that limits me. Or if I open it, did I write it womehow? I look
at the pages. How can I enter it? Tell me the topic, please, and
I will write the story of my life.
But which
I found its way into print? What was the mystery, and who wolved
it.
This issue of Chain grew out of a conversation I had with
Jena Osman last year at the Kelly Writers House in Philadelphia.
I described to Jena some of the work I'd been hearing from writers
who'd been coming through the House, work that seemed to address
the motives of memoir without bowing to its generic conventions
or ideological assumptions. Juliana Spahr joined the conversation,
then co-editors Dorothy Wang, Nzadi Keita and Marina Budhos, and
we began to imagine a collection. There were poets whose work was
autobiographical yet defied confessionalism's ahistorical identifications,
its solipsism. There were prose writers whose memoirs took as their
subjects the constructedness of the selves. There were writers whose
work addressed their own political and social minority and the ways
that representing the self can both articulate and challenge one's
inscription into a marginal position. One could see a kind of conversation
taking place among contemporary writers about how to understand
and represent subjectivity--whether or not and how to locate it,
name it, cohere it, identify with it.
Hey!
I am going to make up an I that will stick to the pages of a book.
I'm out there now where you all are. Oh, you say I am already entered
into your book. But you wrote yours in a different language. Different
story. For a different set of eyes. Can you tell me my sections.
It's like a boat floating; it needs a map.
Chain 7: memoir/anti-memoir presents new texts that show
the expanse and range of contemporary memoir. The works gathered
here reveal memoir as re-invention, as generic interplay, as a conversation
among texts, as travel back and forth and across times and states
of mind. One can see in these texts the political and psychic stakes
involved in self-representation and the ongoing negotiations of
subjects, in dreams and particular material histories, making their
way. Across the differences, there is a consciousness of language
as the inter-me-diary.
Thrown from a boat, a boy nearly drowns but doesn't. Who is
his father? George Washington wants him to have all of the opportunities
our VCR has. What does an I have to do with an E? Headings in the
same world book.
Many thanks to our contributors for the work. Thanks also to Chain's
editors Jena Osman, Juliana Spahr, and Janet Zweig, and to this
particular issue's co-editors, Marina Budhos, Nzadi Keita, Dorothy
Wang.
Now always I was swimming. The waves. The terrible
waves. How do I dare not identify. Warm, dry skin of the book.
--Kerry Sherin

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