| The Drunken Boat ISSN:1530-7646 Spring/Summer 2012 Vol. 10 Issues I-II
A body and its shadow shared a world The shadow’s shadow spread over the body This world was the fusion of possible shadows And the shadow of each part of this world was itself afusion of this world, and only of this world Shadow, the fusion of shadows makefor a living world When shadow and shadow of shadow no longer merge into one world that world is dead It will be objected that possibly there is nothing ratherthan something And that, if a world is the maximal fusion of all theshadows it contains, there is possibly, throughinvisible reflection as well as involution, a world that is absolutely empty But a world is not a bottle from which light escapes likesmoke A world is a necessary truth, not an explanation There is no empty world, a worldis not even empty when re- duced to a point that is indescribable —ThePlurality of Worlds of Lewis, by Jacques Roubaud, trans.Rosemarie Waldrop |
Fall/Winter 2011 …Translation Issue 2011 … Cave Canem 2008 … Fall/Winter 2007 … Fall/Winter 2006 … Spring/Summer 2006 … Fall/Winter2005 … Spring/Summer2005 … Fall/Winter2004 … Spring/Summer2003 … Winter 2003 … Fall 2002 …Summer 2002 …Spring 2002 …Winter 2002 … Fall 2001 …Summer 2001 … Spring 2001 … Winter 2000 … Spring 2000 … Summer 2000 … Fall 2000 …Contributors … Chapbooks … Translation Feature … Reviews … Essays … Artwork … Masthead … Rimbaud … Contact … | |
| Thetheme for this Spring/Summer 2012 issue of The Drunken Boat was sourced from Rosemarie Waldrop’s translationof Jacques Roubaud’s The Plurality ofWorlds of Lewis. Waldrop’s translation of Roubaud’s book, afollow-up to his Some Thing Black,has fascinated and engaged me for over ten years. Both books are concerned withmany things—philosophy, science, being, self/other, death, light—aswell as the author’s loss of his young wife, who died at age 31 of a pulmonaryembolism. I took a breath of Roubaud’s text and sent it to many poets ofvarious styles, locales, aesthetics, narratives and voices. I wished to seewhat would arrive and unravel with this bit of language under the tongue, fromother poets. This type of project is certainly not new, but it does create itsown world or worlds. What is collected here is not empty, but reflectiveand shadowed and myriad. –Melissa Buckheit IN THIS ISSUE: Samuel Ace Maya Asher Naomi Benaron Debby Jo Blank Amaranth Borsuk Marguerite Guzman Bouvard Lisa Bowden Paul Braffort Melissa Buckheit Simmons B. Buntin Wendy Burk D. Phillip Clifford Lisa M. Cole Leopoldine Core Nicholas A DeBoer Jennifer K. Dick Michelle Elvy Julie R. Enszer Carrie Etter Kit Fryatt Janice Gould Annie Guthrie Justin Hardecker Mark Haunschild HRHegnauer Jen Hofer Gabriela Jauregui Emma Jones Karen Klein Drew Krewer Sueyeun Juliette Lee Mark Lee Rachel Lehrman Eric Magrane Kristi Maxwell Jeevan Narney Kristen E. Nelson Sarah Rose Nordgren Maria Pinto Sam Rasnake Eléna Rivera Yael Shinar Jennifer Stella Todd Swift Shelly Taylor Scott Thurston M.E.Wakamatsu Joni Wallace Orlando White Eleanor Wilner |
| | WHAT ONE WANTS AND WHAT WILL BE PRESCRIBED WITHOUT ONE SINGLE CENTER FOREVER ![]() by Sueyeun Juliette Lee and Nicholas DeBoer Choir of the Gone ![]() by Lisa Bowden |
Essays | Chapbooks | Art | Contributors |
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