
Mapping the Delta
Description
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The Delta is a densely populated place. Whole countries inhabit it, exercising their powers and authority, presenting their offers of complicity and compliance. Individuals move through the night and come upon themselves in its mirrors. Dreamers and fantasists repopulate its hidden corners: Rimbaud, Bruno Schultz, William Blake, Arthur Schnitzler and the physicist Dennis Gabor lay claim to their own visions of it.
Animals gaze at their human companions who gaze back. They try to puzzle each other out, looking to climb into each other's eyes. They court each other, desire their own species, are captivated both by each other's and their own beauty. Life goes on its desultory way, finding itself between creeks and cracks. And occasionally the world does crack open. Planes crash, boats sink, weather changes, floodwaters rise, people vanish on journeys. Anxiety remains: disaster zones persist into old age and death, and into the life, death and resurrection of language itself.
At the core of the book is The Yellow Room, a sequence of mirror poems contemplating the Jewishness of the poet's father. The room constricts and glows. The poem breaks up across the page at intervals then reassembles into its mirrors.
Many of the poems are formal haiku sequences. They are new parts of a personal Delta. Others are in rhymed and broken stanzas. The Delta has to survive - if it survives at all - on its broken patterns.
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Content
- Intro
- DESCRIPTION
- TITLE PAGE
- DEDICATION
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
- CONTENTS
- Mapping the Delta
- Mapping the Delta
- In the Cinema Lobby
- Central Europe
- Bartók
- The Thirties
- Blessed Isle
- Postcolonial Operations
- Patriarchs
- After a line of W.H. Auden
- In Defence of Cliché
- Man at a Bar
- In Defence of Cliché
- What we talk about when we talk about talking
- Insomnia
- Assault
- Spleen
- Spleen
- The Boy-King's Tale
- Laughter
- Meet Harpo
- In the Country of the Heart
- Minimalist
- Charge Sheet
- When the wicked come.
- Eden
- Minimenta: A Topography
- A Drunken Boat
- The Drunken Boat
- Slum
- Conneries
- Royal Street
- In the City
- At the Corner of the Table
- Prudence
- City Snapshots
- Bruno Schulz, She Said
- Bruno Schulz, She Said
- On Angels
- Nine Meditations on Francesca Woodman
- Like That Raw Engine
- Jukebox
- A Hard Day's Night
- Island of Dreams
- Sealed with a Kiss
- Needle in a Haystack
- You've Lost That Loving Feeling
- Shine On You Crazy Diamond
- Nowhere to Run
- In Wolf's Clothing
- The Wolf Reader
- A Paradise Garden
- Among Animals
- Animal Inside
- Blakesongs
- The Ghost of a Flea
- A Vision of the Daughters of Albion
- Nurse's Song
- The Sick Rose
- Nine Annotations to The Proverbs of Hell
- Courtship
- Courtship
- On Beauty
- What she told me about beauty
- Magic Realism
- Silver
- In the Hotel Room
- Overheard
- Devious
- Illicit: A Dream Story
- Mottoes from Schnitzler
- Anxiety
- Ghostlight
- On Getting Lost
- At the Train Window
- The Engine Turns
- Naming and shaming
- The Leaves
- Glass
- Variations after Sappho
- It Never Quite Goes, the Sense of Anxiety
- The Voices
- The Yellow Room
- Disaster Zone: Flood
- Event
- Surge
- Listening to the weather
- Umbrella
- But
- Wreckage
- A Dream of New Washing
- The Mathematics of Freedom
- Hologram
- The Definition of Liberty
- Small Change
- Beef
- Nutritional Value
- Eternity
- The Instruments
- Hologram as Light
- Disaster Zone: The Missing
- Disaster Zone
- A Low Flying Plane
- Runway
- The Missing
- Lament
- Singular
- Backspace
- Cargo
- The Books
- Stillness
- Stillness
- Ice Cap
- Maghreb
- The Hotel Opens
- Chord and Ornament
- A Flowering
- South
- A Quartet from Finland
- A Note on Photographs
- Rembrandt
- Rembrandt
- Bright Room
- Nothing
- Room with a View
- Filming Death
- Mourning: a sketch
- The Matrix Reloaded
- Forked Tongues
- Caedmon
- Polyphonic
- A Close Run Thing with the Police
- Leave It to Us
- Good Dog Voice
- A Small Book of Melancholy
- Who Crouches.
- Tritina
- A Small Book of Melancholy
- A Hungarian Folk Song
- A Photograph
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR
- COPYRIGHT
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