Description |
149 pages ; 23 cm. |
|
text txt rdacontent |
|
unmediated n rdamedia |
|
volume nc rdacarrier |
Series |
The new series ; #75 |
|
New series (Ahsahta Press) ; no. 75.
|
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references. |
Summary |
"Objects from a Borrowed Confession includes an epistolary novella, two essays, an experimental memoir, a letter, and a series of other prose works all circling the theme of confession. The book takes up questions of desire, loneliness, anger, envy, and grief as it considers what drives us to confess. Is confession "truth telling," or more a way to invent a narrative of selfhood? In confessing are we asking to be absolved, or seeking to be made whole? What is intimacy and is it possible to forge an intimacy with someone you have never met? Is love a feeling or a condition? Does the self exist once the mind is lost? What, finally, is the value of having and confessing a "self" in the face of violence and loss" -- Provided by publisher. |
Contents |
What do we want to know -- Objects from a borrowed confession -- The war reporter: on confession -- Destroyed works (or, expanded cinema) -- The light of is is: on anger -- Envy -- Destroyed works -- Pity pride and shame: a memoir -- By beauty and by fear: on narrative time -- That's not me: an afterthought. |
Subject |
Self-disclosure.
|
|
Emotions.
|
|
Identity (Psychology)
|
|
Intimacy (Psychology)
|
|
Self.
|
|
Emotions. (OCoLC)fst00908819
|
|
Identity (Psychology) (OCoLC)fst00966892
|
|
Intimacy (Psychology) (OCoLC)fst00977714
|
|
Self. (OCoLC)fst01111441
|
|
Self-disclosure. (OCoLC)fst01111620
|
ISBN |
9781934103685 paperback |
|
1934103683 paperback |
|
9781934103708 |
|