Archive for March, 2008

On the Threshold of Recorded Sound

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

In an age of digital reproduction, we forget the physical nature of acts of recording, we think of data online as data “out there” rather than as data existing within a very real set of machines, and thus, even as we view information as both existing and not existing, we are further removed from the actual liminal nature of reproduction and recording. We forget how such objects as phonographs all the way to mp3 players make sound perceivable by other senses so that the phenomenon becomes liminal itself– external synaesthesia again. We have become numbed to the way such technologies represent the capturing of temporary phenomenon and thus the transition of such things as sound from fleeting to (relatively) permanent. We can only imagine the sense of in-betweenness felt by those who first recorded sound– that is, until the technology to record some aspect of perception we have not yet imagined being made permanent is developed.

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Liminality in Lines + Stars 1.4 (Winter 2007)

Friday, March 28th, 2008

The theme of the current issue of Lines + Stars seems to be a natural for inducing the development of liminal works. As the editor, Rachel Adams, puts it:

During the time of the year in which light is the most dynamic, Lines + Stars is focusing its current issue on that very concept — the ways in which we illuminate or are illuminated, and the things that keep us in the dark.

The poetry and prose collected for the issue, for the most part, does not disappoint in this regard. The pretty descriptions in Daniel Barbiero’s Driving Into a Rainstorm on the Road to Charlottesville are used to contemplate the identity of light and color and how one transitions to the other through human thought and language (and through water), though in lines that are all shorter than the title. Regina Coll’s Migration Station covers transitional themes beginning with its title, but I’m still trying to figure out what “[o]ur dogs chase the beauties” means. Gale Acuff’s Logocentric follows the contortions of the writer’s mind when it dwells in the liminal state of facing the blank page then describes the transition of these thoughts into a poem that must be defended and ends with the hint of eternal transition through revision (which is God’s provenance when it comes to history and the writer’s when it comes to words).

Amy Garret-Brown writes in a form that once, by its very hybridity, carried liminal connotations, yet as the prose poem has become accepted and normalized, consciousness of its both-andness (or perhaps its neither-norness) has been reduced. Nevertheless, in the leaps from image to image and the constant motion of the varied subjects of the piece, she manages to imbue Icicle with a sense of transition. The phrase “14 phases of solid water” implies both change and paradox. Spectrums always imply some degree of liminality, but hers do so in an expanded realm: “[t]he electromagnetic spectrum—legs of color, of sound, Vitamin D is absorbed by exposure to the sun, our bodies remade, gloved in light and sound”.

In the genre of prose prose, the very title Christine Stoddard’s Menopausal Snail refers to a state of transition and, as we find out, is a metaphor used to describe another liminal state: commuting. The narrator, too, hovers on the threshold between waking and sleep.

More strongly liminal, Liz Dolan’s Marie Curie Illuminates Her Research for Us posits light itself as in-between or ambivalently good and bad. It is both “the luminous light of the mind / and the silver white of the radium” that she worships alongside Pierre and his protege “together at night”. This makes of Curie something of an ambiguous figure, a Salome indeed, even if she is only called so by the poem’s antagonist, the protege’s wife who cannot see the light of his mind and is “luciferous”.

While it may at first seem strange to think of a woman who is metaphorically blind to light being described by an adjective derived from “light bringer”, there is another figure in the poem who works with light, Pierre, who is more literally blinded. Thus, an apparent error on the poet’s part becomes, under examination, a thematic echo that simultaneously gives an otherwise flat character a third dimension. Of course, the light the Curies bring is as dubious as that brought by Lucifer.

Not every piece, however, is as deliciously liminal and uncertain as this. Kimberley Becker’s Vellum follows the path of remembering and so moves from doubt to dull certainty, which is perhaps not a fault according to the terms of the poem itself but is one for those of us interested in transition more than an end or beginning state (so, too, the introductory stanza bores). In The Woods Stagger, David McLean follows a similar pattern. At first, he presents an appropriately disorderly and discordant set of thoughts to portray the transition of a forest to winter. Unfortunately, the concluding couplet undoes that beautiful chaos with a pat conclusion. His Where God Was, while relating a transition, suffers from too much certainty throughout.

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Camera Lucida

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Wired has a brief piece up about artists using sulfuric acid to create– and capture– sonoluminescence, a phenomenon that by its very nature exists on a threshold. Sound waves create light waves, or sound is transformed into light. Those who witness it experience a sort of externalized synaesthesia, a confusion of the senses reflected in measurable outside reality. This aspect is most obvious in the case of the installations, as the photographs, while indicating the visibility of sound, will be viewed by audiences removed from the time frame of sound.

The photographs, however, develop another sort of hybridity and border space through the immortalization of a short-lived phenomenon. Technically, of course, every photograph does record a vanishing frame, an impermanent state, but the understanding that the clouds of color must have disappeared shortly after a picture was taken allows this sort of subject matter to emphasize the liminal area inhabited by all photography in a way that images of old trees and Ozymandias cannot.

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The Launch

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Welcome to the beginning of CRIT’s Night Stream Journey. This blog will endeavor to link Crossing Rivers Into Twilight with other work on similar themes of liminality and transition that appear on and offline or only in our bloggers’ minds.

If you would be interested in joining the voyage as a blogger, please send 1-2 sample  posts to critjournal (at) gmail. Multimedia welcome.

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