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MARC Record from marc_columbia

Record ID marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-026.mrc:53319014:1809
Source marc_columbia
Download Link /show-records/marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-026.mrc:53319014:1809?format=raw

LEADER: 01809cam a2200301 i 4500
001 12798783
005 20171120153304.0
008 170721s2017 gw 000 0 eng d
019 $a990852753
020 $a9783956793158$q(pbk.)
020 $a3956793153
024 3 $a9783956793158
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn993290627
035 $a(OCoLC)993290627$z(OCoLC)990852753
035 $a(NNC)12798783
040 $aOHX$beng$cOHX$dYDX$dHLS$dERASA$dNNC
050 4 $aPS3612.A89$bA6 2017
072 7 $aPS$2lcco
072 7 $aNX$2lcco
082 04 $a700.411
100 1 $aLatimer, Quinn.
245 10 $aLike a woman$bessays, readings, poems /$cQuinn Latimer ; editor: Max Bach.
260 $aBerlin :$bSternberg Press,$c[2017].
300 $a245 pages ;$c21 cm.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references.
520 8 $aQuinn Latimer's arresting writings find expression in literature and theory as well as contemporary art and its history. Moving from Southern California to central and southern Europe, crossing geographies and genres, her texts record specters and realities of culture, migration, and displacement, compounding the vagaries of rhetoric and poetics with those of personal history and criticism. Composed in the space between the page and live performance, Latimer's recent essays and poems collected here examine issues of genealogy and influence, the poverty and privilege of place, architecture's relationship to language, and feminist economies of writing, reading, and art making. Shifting between written language and live address, between the needs of the internal and the external voice, 'Like a Woman' retrieves the refrain, the litany, and the chorus, exploring their serial ecstasies and political possibilities.
700 1 $aBach, Max,$eeditor.
852 00 $bglx$hPS3612.A89$iA6 2017g