Imperial Physique
Phrydas, JH.
Imperial Physique - 1 online resource (158 pages). - Book collections on Project MUSE. .
Open Access
"In 2008, JH Phrydas wrote a story about how bodies talk without words. He wanted the story to not just describe the silent ritual of nonverbal communication but to perform it. The interaction would be visceral - the exchange melancholic, yet full of lust. He wanted words to retain the unsayable: the subtle movements of a body in heat. In the years since, Phrydas kept rewriting this story, using different techniques, different syntaxes and forms, in hopes that he would find a successful method of gestural writing. Imperial Physique is a collection of these attempts. They explore the way our bodies hover between animal and human, civil and wild. The bleakness - and underlying verve - of imagining Western empires in decline serve as a backdrop for a lone figure searching city streets, decaying architecture, and sand dunes for some type of physical connection. What arises is the loss of - and longing for - touch at the edges of imperialism, historical violence, and personal shame."
English.
9781950192540
Sex
Gay culture
Of specific Gay interest.
Gay studies (Gay men)
Culture homosexuelle.
Sex--Fiction.
Gay culture.
Queer studies.
Fiction
Electronic books.
Imperial Physique - 1 online resource (158 pages). - Book collections on Project MUSE. .
Open Access
"In 2008, JH Phrydas wrote a story about how bodies talk without words. He wanted the story to not just describe the silent ritual of nonverbal communication but to perform it. The interaction would be visceral - the exchange melancholic, yet full of lust. He wanted words to retain the unsayable: the subtle movements of a body in heat. In the years since, Phrydas kept rewriting this story, using different techniques, different syntaxes and forms, in hopes that he would find a successful method of gestural writing. Imperial Physique is a collection of these attempts. They explore the way our bodies hover between animal and human, civil and wild. The bleakness - and underlying verve - of imagining Western empires in decline serve as a backdrop for a lone figure searching city streets, decaying architecture, and sand dunes for some type of physical connection. What arises is the loss of - and longing for - touch at the edges of imperialism, historical violence, and personal shame."
English.
9781950192540
Sex
Gay culture
Of specific Gay interest.
Gay studies (Gay men)
Culture homosexuelle.
Sex--Fiction.
Gay culture.
Queer studies.
Fiction
Electronic books.