Front cover image for Fat art, thin art

Fat art, thin art

Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick (Author)
"Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick is best known as a cultural and literary critic, as one of the primary forces behind the development of queer and gay/lesbian studies, and as author of several influential books: Tendencies, Epistemology of the Closet, and Between Men: English Literature and Male Homosocial Desire. The publication of Fat Art, Thin Art, Sedgwick's first volume of poetry, opens up another dimension of her continuing project of crossing and re-crossing the electrified boundaries between theory, lyric, and narrative. Embodying a decades-long adventure, the poems collected here offer the most accessible and definitive formulations to appear anywhere in Sedgwick's writing on some characteristic subjects and some new ones: passionate attachments within and across genders; queer childhoods of many kinds; the performativity of a long, unconventional marriage; depressiveness, hilarity, and bliss; grave illness; despised and magnetic bodies and bodily parts. In two long fictional poems, a rich narrative momentum engages readers in the mysterious places - including Victorian novels - where characters, sexualities, and fates are unmade and made. Sedgwick's poetry opens an unfamiliar, intimate, daring space that steadily refigures not only what a critic may be, but what a poem can do."--Publisher description
Print Book, English, 1994
Duke University Press, Durham, 1994
poetry
160 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
9780822315018, 9780822315124, 0822315017, 0822315122
30036470
"Who fed this muse?"
Joy. He's himself today! He knows me!
"Grave, never offering back the face of my dear"
"Guys who were 35 last year are 70 this year"
The Navajo Rug
A Vigil
The Use of Being Fat
"For years it drove me crazy"
Performative (Toronto)
Performative (San Francisco)
"What I would be when I grew up"
"Not like the clownish, friendly way you talk"
Sh
"I can tune my mind today"
"All I know is I woke up thinking"
Snapsh
"Crushed. Dilapidated."
The 58 1/2 Minute Hour
How Not to Be There
"Mobility, speech, sight"
"A scar, just a scar"
"When I got so sick it never occurred to me"
"Little kid at the airport practicing"
"In dreams they're interchangeable"
Our
"It seems there are two kinds of marriage"
"One of us falls asleep on the other's shoulder"
Not
Nicht Mehr Leben
"I'm safe so long as the single feather of one wing"
"In dreams on which decades of marriage haven't"
Trace at 46
An Essay on the Picture Plane
Everything Always Distracts
Sexual Hum
Penn Central: New Haven Line
Poet
Sestina Lente
The Warm Decembers
Note on "The Warm Decembers."