Claudia Rankine, Friedrich Nietzsche, and the Untimely Present
Foley, A
Date: 28 November 2018
Article
Journal
symploke
Publisher
University of Nebraska Press
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Abstract
I propose over the course of this essay that Claudia Rankine’s poetry re-envisions Friedrich Nietzsche’s philosophy of life, particularly his notion that life emerges from a willful forgetting. For Rankine, 'the condition of black life is one of mourning', a condition in which it becomes impossible to forget. These two thinkers meet ...
I propose over the course of this essay that Claudia Rankine’s poetry re-envisions Friedrich Nietzsche’s philosophy of life, particularly his notion that life emerges from a willful forgetting. For Rankine, 'the condition of black life is one of mourning', a condition in which it becomes impossible to forget. These two thinkers meet most provocatively in their theorizations of the "bounded horizon" within which life, and art, take form. I argue that Rankine's poetry offers a corrective to Nietzsche's early philosophy of life, while also meeting him on the grounds of art, wherein life--including black life--might still find its expression.
English
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