A Space on the Side of the Road: Cultural Poetics in an

A Space on the Side of the Road: Cultural Poetics in an "Other" America

by Kathleen Stewart
A Space on the Side of the Road: Cultural Poetics in an

A Space on the Side of the Road: Cultural Poetics in an "Other" America

by Kathleen Stewart

eBook

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Overview

A Space on the Side of the Road vividly evokes an "other" America that survives precariously among the ruins of the West Virginia coal camps and "hollers." To Kathleen Stewart, this particular "other" exists as an excluded subtext to the American narrative of capitalism, modernization, materialism, and democracy. In towns like Amigo, Red Jacket, Helen, Odd, Viper, Decoy, and Twilight, men and women "just settin'" track a dense social imaginary through stories of traumas, apparitions, encounters, and eccentricities. Stewart explores how this rhythmic, dramatic, and complicated storytelling imbues everyday life in the hills and forms a cultural poetics. Alternating her own ruminations on language, culture, and politics with continuous accounts of "just talk," Stewart propels us into the intensity of this nervous, surreal "space on the side of the road." It is a space that gives us a glimpse into a breach in American society itself, where graveyards of junked cars and piles of other trashed objects endure along with the memories that haunt those who have been left behind by "progress."


Like James Agee's portrayal of the poverty-stricken tenant farmers of the Depression South in Let Us Now Praise Famous Men, this book uses both language and photographs to help readers encounter a fragmented and betrayed community, one "occupied" by schoolteachers, doctors, social workers, and other professionals representing an "official" America. Holding at bay any attempts at definitive, social scientific analysis, Stewart has concocted a new sort of ethnographic writing that conveys the immediacy, density, texture, and materiality of the coal camps. A Space on the Side of the Road finally bridges the gap between anthropology and cultural studies and provides us with a brilliant and challenging experiment in thinking and writing about "America."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691212883
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 05/05/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 15 MB
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About the Author

Kathleen Stewart is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at the University of Texas, Austin.

Table of Contents

List of Photographs
Acknowledgments
Prologue3
1The Space of Culture13
A Space of Critique20
"Subjects" and "Objects" in the Space of an Immanent Critique21
The Space of Story26
The Space on the Side of the Road32
An Ethnographic Space39
2Mimetic Excess in an Occupied Place41
An "Other" America41
An Occupied Place42
The Hills as a Social Imaginary50
Being Caught53
The Spectacle of Impacts56
A Lost Homeland63
3Unforgetting: The Anecdotal and the Accidental67
Unforgetting71
A Near Miss75
The Diacritics of Interruptions81
An Other Interruption, or an Interruption from the Other Side84
4Chronotopes90
Roaming the Ruins90
The Shock of History97
Riley's Last Ride112
Mr. Henry's Sticks115
5Encounters117
The Bourgeois Imaginary117
Spaces of Encounter119
Encountering Alterity125
The Sign of the Body128
Hollie Smith's Encounter135
Afterthought139
6The Space of the Sign140
The Social Semiotics of Signs141
Signs of Sociality147
The Space of the Gap157
The Space of Performance159
A Visit(ation)162
7The Accident165
A Visit(ation)169
A Postcard177
8The Place of Ideals179
The Space of Mediation179
Claims and Counterclaims183
Ideals in the Space of Desire189
In the Realm of Negations194
Placing People201
9A Space on the Side of the Road205
Notes213
Bibliography217
Index239

What People are Saying About This

Lauren Berlant

With its densely textured scanning of the languages people use to explain their lives without explaining them away, [this book] is by far the best [one] written on ordinary language, pain, and desire in the contemporary United States.
Lauren Berlant, University of Chicago

From the Publisher

"With its densely textured scanning of the languages people use to explain their lives without explaining them away, [this book] is by far the best [one] written on ordinary language, pain, and desire in the contemporary United States."—Lauren Berlant, University of Chicago

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