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"Will you not memorize a little poetry to halt the slaughter?" the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish wrote. Darwish’s poetic statement points to world-evacuating and genocidal violences – in a triangulation of Palestine, Iraq, and the American settler state – as his language recalls us to a sonority in utterance and acts of refusal in collective form. Through readings of Arabic and Arab poetry, art, translation, and philosophy, Jeffrey Sacks illumines an indetermined, non-accumulative, non-propertied manner of lingual doing – across post-Ottoman topographies and states, and in excess of any single language – where language is a practice in sociality, the social is indistinct from the ontological, and being is a poetic mode – what this book calls "poeticality."
Poeticality studies the Lebanese-American poet and painter Etel Adnan, the Iraqi poet and translator Khālid al-Maʿālī, philosophers in the Arabic peripatetic tradition, and writings of Karl Marx, Paul Celan, Walter Benjamin, and others, to demonstrate a sense of form wholly other than what is advanced in self-determined social existence, linguistic self-understanding, and philosophical self-representation – a manner of address and a social pose, which Sacks summarizes under the heading "settler life."
Settler life – a form of life, a practice of reading, and an asymmetric distribution of social destruction – asserts itself as a generalized and regulating attack upon Black and Indigenous life, and upon all forms of nonwhite, non-Christian, non-heteronormative existence. "Everything is in the language we use," the Oglala Lakota poet Layli Long Soldier has written. This book – learning from Long Soldier’s observation and with Darwish’s sense of the poetic – affirms the demand for Indigenous sovereignty, in Palestine, in Turtle Island, and elsewhere, a demand which, through the collective acts occasioned in it, decomposes and deposes all sovereign forms and all stately legalities, in refusal of settler life.
"Will you not memorize a little poetry to halt the slaughter?" the Palestinian poet Mahmoud Darwish wrote. Darwish’s poetic statement points to world-evacuating and genocidal violences – in a triangulation of Palestine, Iraq, and the American settler state – as his language recalls us to a sonority in utterance and acts of refusal in collective form. Through readings of Arabic and Arab poetry, art, translation, and philosophy, Jeffrey Sacks illumines an indetermined, non-accumulative, non-propertied manner of lingual doing – across post-Ottoman topographies and states, and in excess of any single language – where language is a practice in sociality, the social is indistinct from the ontological, and being is a poetic mode – what this book calls "poeticality."
Poeticality studies the Lebanese-American poet and painter Etel Adnan, the Iraqi poet and translator Khālid al-Maʿālī, philosophers in the Arabic peripatetic tradition, and writings of Karl Marx, Paul Celan, Walter Benjamin, and others, to demonstrate a sense of form wholly other than what is advanced in self-determined social existence, linguistic self-understanding, and philosophical self-representation – a manner of address and a social pose, which Sacks summarizes under the heading "settler life."
Settler life – a form of life, a practice of reading, and an asymmetric distribution of social destruction – asserts itself as a generalized and regulating attack upon Black and Indigenous life, and upon all forms of nonwhite, non-Christian, non-heteronormative existence. "Everything is in the language we use," the Oglala Lakota poet Layli Long Soldier has written. This book – learning from Long Soldier’s observation and with Darwish’s sense of the poetic – affirms the demand for Indigenous sovereignty, in Palestine, in Turtle Island, and elsewhere, a demand which, through the collective acts occasioned in it, decomposes and deposes all sovereign forms and all stately legalities, in refusal of settler life.
Acknowledgments xi
Preface xv
Introduction:
- Poeticality 1
- 1 Settler Life 19
Reading Life, 21 - Property, 27
- Pacification, 38
- Translation, 48
- Politick Societies, 53
2 Anontological Form 66
- Patience, 68
- Mere Being, 73
- Demonstration, 83
- Insubstantiality, 92
- Common Things, 97
- Necessity, 101
- Generosity, 112
3 Insurgence: A Poetics of Things 118
- Reverberation, 121
- Inessential Gathering, 130
- Language, 140
- Poetic Being, 148
- Insurgent Life, 165
Notes 175
Works Cited 247
Index 273
Plates follow page 92
| Erscheinungsjahr: | 2026 |
|---|---|
| Genre: | Importe |
| Rubrik: | Literaturwissenschaft |
| Medium: | Taschenbuch |
| Inhalt: | Einband - flex.(Paperback) |
| ISBN-13: | 9781531512330 |
| ISBN-10: | 153151233X |
| Sprache: | Englisch |
| Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
| Autor: | Sacks, Jeffrey |
| Hersteller: | Fordham University Press |
| Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de |
| Maße: | 229 x 152 x 21 mm |
| Von/Mit: | Jeffrey Sacks |
| Erscheinungsdatum: | 03.02.2026 |
| Gewicht: | 0,603 kg |