Burqa of Skin

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$29.12 - $300.00
UPC:
9781772140019
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
1/15/2015
Author:
Nelly Arcan
Language:
english

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Product Overview

Literary Nonfiction. Women's Studies. Translated by Melissa Bull. BURQA OF SKIN is a dense collection of writings channelling harrowing disenchantment and indignation. From her very first novel, PUTAIN (Seuil, 2001), Nelly Arcan shook the literary landscape with her flamboyant lyricism and her preoccupations with such recurring themes as our culture's vertiginous obsession with youth, and its reverse: the draw of death. Now beyond the ripples of scandal Arcan's work has caused, here are the last echoes of her work, and it is as stunning as it is brief. BURQA OF SKIN, with its gruesome title, catapults her work into contemporary debates on culture and gender. The book collects three previously unpublished works: The Dress, The Child in the Mirror and Shame. The first two are written in the first person, in that turbulent, suffocating language that was Arcan's singular brand, that of a writer on the edge. In the third text, she analyses with inexhaustible ferocity her humiliating experience on the set of a TV talk show. Two lesser- known nonfiction pieces are also included in this collection: a reflection on speed dating and a column published in 2004 titled Suicide Can Be Harmful to Your Health.

A masterpiece, a rare and poisonous plant whose posthumous publication makes [the work] all the more striking. Juliette Einhorn, Le Figaro

... When Arcan's writing is at its sharpestas it nearly always was, and as Melissa Bull's translation convincingly conveyspractically every sentence can serve as a jumping-off point for sustained contemplation and/or heated debate... The Montreal Gazette

...the writing is genuine and lived, giving an almost real-time picture of the author's philosophical wrestlings... stylishly translated by Melissa Bull... Fantastically intelligent, always trying to second-guess how a woman should be, Arcan finds death the only answer to her predicament. In style and emotionand honestyher work is a much closer cousin to Edouard Leve's Suicide than to the archness of Belle de Jour or Catherine Millet. The best way to absorb Arcan's work is to read it in chronological order, and then to lament that the titles of her workWhore, Hysteric, Breakneck, Exitso succinctly and poignantly summarize the short life and hard-won philosophy of this exceptional writer. The Times Literary Supplement

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