Imagined Theatres:
Writing for a Theoretical Stage
Edinburgh International Book Festival
17 August 2017
Daniel Sack
Dominika Laster
Michael McMillan
Carla Harryman
Jen Harvie
Entries published at 08/20/2017
August 20, 2017
Imagined Theatres:
Writing for a Theoretical Stage
Edinburgh International Book Festival
17 August 2017
Daniel Sack
Dominika Laster
Michael McMillan
Carla Harryman
Jen Harvie
from “The Trouble with Occupy:
Materialism, Transvaluation, and the Symbolic”
Occupy was, and continues to be, an event; we speak of “the event of Occupy” much as we refer to the “event of 9/11.” Occupy poets both participated in the event of Occupy but also continued it as an event through their work, which to a degree anticipated the event in providing terms drawn from poetry. At the center of the Occupy movement was a poetics, one that is not merely represented by its poets or reflected in their work. The spontaneity of decision making, the refusal of hierarchical structures, the advocacy of a “transvaluation of all values” without concrete political goals, the temporal and spatial forms of the movement, its self-understanding as exemplary as much as practical—all point toward a constructivist poetics in which there are no prior givens or certain grounds. My writing on Occupy poetry, too, has had an evental character; what follows develops a sequence of paradigms over several conference presentations and publications as political events continued to unfold. It has not been sufficiently noted that a shift in the register of politics as “event” from Occupy in 2011 to the 2012 reelection of Barack Obama effectively ended the active phase of the movement; since that time, it has persisted as a political imaginary that has been both absorbed into political developments like the Sanders campaign and preserved in an ongoing articulation of poetics and political theory. … More